Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Foreword
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Diagnostic and Clinical aspects
- Part III Growth hormone replacement therapy in adults with growth hormone deficiency
- 8 The effect of growth hormone on protein metabolism
- 9 Growth hormone deficiency, insulin resistance and glucose metabolism
- 10 Growth hormone and body composition
- 11 Effects of growth hormone on human fluid homeostasis
- 12 Growth hormone and cardiac function
- 13 Growth hormone and cardiovascular risk factors
- 14 Growth hormone (GH), exercise performance, muscle strength and sweat production in healthy subjects and in adults with GH deficiency
- 15 Growth hormone and bone and mineral metabolism
- 16 Growth hormone and thyroid function and energy expenditure
- 17 Growth hormone and psychosocial and central nervous effects
- 18 Impact of gender and age on growth hormone responsiveness
- Part IV Growth hormone, growth-hormone releasing peptides and ageing
- Index
15 - Growth hormone and bone and mineral metabolism
from Part III - Growth hormone replacement therapy in adults with growth hormone deficiency
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Foreword
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Diagnostic and Clinical aspects
- Part III Growth hormone replacement therapy in adults with growth hormone deficiency
- 8 The effect of growth hormone on protein metabolism
- 9 Growth hormone deficiency, insulin resistance and glucose metabolism
- 10 Growth hormone and body composition
- 11 Effects of growth hormone on human fluid homeostasis
- 12 Growth hormone and cardiac function
- 13 Growth hormone and cardiovascular risk factors
- 14 Growth hormone (GH), exercise performance, muscle strength and sweat production in healthy subjects and in adults with GH deficiency
- 15 Growth hormone and bone and mineral metabolism
- 16 Growth hormone and thyroid function and energy expenditure
- 17 Growth hormone and psychosocial and central nervous effects
- 18 Impact of gender and age on growth hormone responsiveness
- Part IV Growth hormone, growth-hormone releasing peptides and ageing
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Bone and mineral metabolism
Bone and mineral metabolism is regulated by an intricate interplay between systemic hormones and locally produced factors (i.e. growth factors, cytokines and prostaglandins) exerting autocrine and paracrine actions on the bone cells or their precursors (Canalis, 1983; Raisz, 1988; Canalis, McCarthy & Centrella, 1989; Ohlsson et al., 1993; Mundy, 1995). Fine tuning of this complex system ensures normal bone growth and preservation of functional integrity of the adult skeleton, but is equally important for ionic homeostasis.
Adult bone is subject to a continuous remodelling process, characterized by focal renewal of microscopic quanta of bone, which takes place in bone remodelling units scattered throughout the skeleton. Within these microscopic units, bone renewal proceeds according to a highly organized sequence of events, the remodelling cycle, involving bone removal by osteoclasts (bone resorption) followed by deposition and mineralization of new bone matrix by osteoblasts (bone formation). Osteoclast and osteoblast function are tightly regulated and coupled through autocrine/paracrine mechanisms, so that in young adults bone resorption and formation are normally in balance.
Partial uncoupling of resorption and formation, with negative or positive balance of the remodelling cycles, will result in loss or gain of bone mass, respectively. Whether these changes in bone mass occur slowly or rapidly depends mainly on the frequency of activation of new remodelling units, which sets the level of bone turnover (i.e. the summation of the remodelling activity in all active units during a considered period of time) (Eriksen, 1986; Parfitt, 1988; Peck & Woods, 1988; Raisz, 1988; Mundy, 1995).
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- Chapter
- Information
- Growth Hormone in AdultsPhysiological and Clinical Aspects, pp. 301 - 332Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000