Seasonal variation in growth during growth hormone therapy
M. C. Rudolf, Z. Zadik, S. Linn and Z. Hochberg
Department of Pediatrics, Rambam Medical Center, Haifa, Israel.
Seasonal variation in growth of normal children has been well described,
although the mechanism by which it occurs has not been elucidated. The
growth of 52 growth hormone-deficient children treated with synthetic human
growth hormone was analyzed. A similar seasonal variation was observed,
with mean (+/- SEM) peak growth occurring in the summer (8.2 +/- 0.3 cm/y)
and winter (7.7 +/- 0.2 cm/y), and trough growth occurring in the autumn
(6.9 +/- 0.3 cm/y). Forty-seven percent of subjects grew minimally during
the autumn, and only two children showed peak growth in that season.
Individual variations between maximal and minimal growth seasons amounted
to 3.5 +/- 0.3 cm/y. The seasonal pattern was statistically significant for
the group as a whole, for the prepubertal subgroup, and for the boys. The
variation persisted when the first year of treatment was excluded to avoid
bias of the initial growth spurt. The season of onset of therapy did not
affect total growth during the first year. The demonstration of a seasonal
pattern in growth of these children suggests that the seasonal variation
may be mediated by peripheral rather than central factors. Paired
clonidine-provoked growth hormone levels and an integrated concentration of
24-hour growth hormone levels and serum levels of insulinlike growth
hormone I measured in a control group of normally growing children were
also analyzed and showed no seasonal variation. This further suggests that
peripheral rather than central factors are responsible for the seasonal
variation in children's growth.