Circulating ghrelin levels in the newborn are positively associated with gestational age

2004 
Summary objective  Ghrelin exerts potent GH-releasing activity and stimulates food intake. Circulating ghrelin levels are increased in anorexia and cachexia, reduced in obesity and restored by weight recovery. Newborns are characterized by GH hypersecretion associated with low IGF-I levels reflecting peripheral GH resistance. study design  The aim of our study was to measure cord ghrelin levels in 117 newborns appropriate for gestational age, born either at term or preterm. results  Ghrelin levels in cord blood (median; 25th−75th centile: 327·6; 206·0–413·0 pg/ml) were higher (P < 0·0001) than those in maternal blood at delivery (133·0; 89·0–173·7 pg/ml), without gender differences. A positive correlation between ghrelin levels in mothers and newborns (r = 0·26, P < 0·01) was observed. Ghrelin levels in newborns born at term (399·0; 229·0–438·0 pg/ml) were remarkably higher (P < 0·0001) than those in born preterm (208·0; 144·5–278·9 pg/ml). A clear positive association was present between ghrelin levels and gestational age. No association between ghrelin and GH, IGF-I, insulin, glucose and leptin levels were found. conclusions  Cord ghrelin levels show clear gestational age-related dependency. The lack of any direct relationship between ghrelin and anthropometric or biochemical parameters in adequate for gestational age newborns does not support the hypothesis that ghrelin has major role in foetal GH secretion and growth.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    28
    References
    50
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []