Iikubo M, Ikeda H, Kobayashi A, Kojima I, Hashimoto K, Sakamoto M, Sasano T
Department of Oral Diagnosis, Tohoku University Graduate School of Dentistry, Sendai 980-8575, Japan.
Horm Metab Res. 2004 Oct;36(10):696-701. doi: 10.1055/s-2004-826019.
To help us investigate the time course of mandibular enlargement in acromegaly or acrogiantism to determine the most suitable period for occlusal treatment in this disease, our aim was to develop a rat model of acromegaly (acrogiantism). In this study, prominent mandibular enlargement was induced by continuous subcutaneous infusion of human recombinant insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) (640 microg/day) in 10-week-old male rats for 4 weeks (n = 6); the control sham-operated group was injected with saline alone (n = 6). Circulating human IGF-I was clearly detectable in the IGF-I group during the four-week administration period, while endogenous rat IGF-I levels decreased. Total IGF-I (human + rat) increased significantly during administration, returning to control levels afterwards. The length of every bone examined (mandible, maxilla, and femur) showed a significant increase compared to control rats, especially the mandible. Although the mandible did not continue to grow after discontinuation of IGF-I administration, it did not return to control size, unlike the maxilla and femur, and disharmonious jaw size (between maxilla and mandible) persisted even after circulating IGF-I levels normalized. These findings in our rat model suggest that mandibular occlusal treatment should only be considered for acromegalic (acrogiantic) patients after serum IGF-I levels have normalized and bone growth has ceased.