Kelly Daniel F, McArthur David L, Levin Harvey, Swimmer Shana, Dusick Joshua R, Cohan Pejman, Wang Christina, Swerdloff Ronald
Division of Neurosurgery, and Gonda Diabetes Center, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California, and Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute, Torrance, California, USA.
J Neurotrauma. 2006 Jun;23(6):928-42. doi: 10.1089/neu.2006.23.928.
Adult-onset growth hormone deficiency (GHD) has been associated with reduced quality of life (QOL) and neurobehavioral (NB) deficits. This prospective study tested the hypothesis that traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients with GHD or GH insufficiency (GHI) would exhibit greater NB/QOL impairment than patients without GHD/GHI. Complicated mild, moderate, and severe adult TBI patients (GCS score 3-14) had pituitary function and NB/QOL testing performed 6-9 months postinjury. GH-secretory capacity was assessed with a GHRH-arginine stimulation test and GHD and GHI were defined as peak GH<6 or <or=12 ng/mL (5th and 10th percentiles of healthy control subjects, respectively). Of 44 patients (mean age, 32+/-18 years; median GCS, 7), one (2%) was GHD, seven (16%) were GHI, and 36 (82%) were GH-sufficient at 6-9 months post-injury. Mean peak GH was 8.2+/-2.1 ng/mL in the GHD/GHI group versus 45.7+/-29 ng/mL in the GHsufficient group. The two groups were well-matched in injury characteristics, except that one patient with GHD had central hypogonadism treated with testosterone prior to NB/QOL testing. At 6-9 months postinjury, patients with GHD/GHI had higher rates of at least one marker of depression (p<0.01), and reduced QOL (by SF-36 Health Survey) in the domains of limitations due to physical health (p=0.02), energy and fatigue (p=0.05), emotional well-being (p=0.02), pain (p=0.01), and general health (p=0.05). Chronic GHI develops in approximately 18% of patients with complicated mild, moderate, or severe TBI, and is associated with depression and diminished QOL. The impact of GH replacement therapy on NB function and QOL in these TBI patients is being tested in a randomized placebo-controlled trial.
成人起病的生长激素缺乏症(GHD)与生活质量(QOL)下降和神经行为(NB)缺陷有关。这项前瞻性研究检验了以下假设:患有GHD或生长激素不足(GHI)的创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者比没有GHD/GHI的患者表现出更严重的NB/QOL损害。对复杂的轻度、中度和重度成人TBI患者(格拉斯哥昏迷评分3 - 14分)在受伤后6 - 9个月进行垂体功能和NB/QOL测试。通过生长激素释放激素 - 精氨酸刺激试验评估生长激素分泌能力,GHD和GHI分别定义为生长激素峰值<6或<或 = 12 ng/mL(分别为健康对照受试者的第5和第10百分位数)。在44例患者(平均年龄32±18岁;格拉斯哥昏迷评分中位数7分)中,1例(2%)为GHD,7例(16%)为GHI,36例(82%)在受伤后6 - 9个月生长激素充足。GHD/GHI组的平均生长激素峰值为8.2±2.1 ng/mL,而生长激素充足组为45.7±29 ng/mL。两组在损伤特征方面匹配良好,只是1例患有GHD的患者在进行NB/QOL测试前接受了睾酮治疗的中枢性性腺功能减退。在受伤后6 - 9个月,患有GHD/GHI的患者至少有一种抑郁标志物的发生率更高(p<0.01),并且在因身体健康导致的限制(p = 0.02)、精力和疲劳(p = 0.05)、情绪健康(p = 0.02)、疼痛(p = 0.01)和总体健康(p = 0.05)等领域的生活质量(通过SF - 36健康调查)下降。在约18%的复杂轻度、中度或重度TBI患者中会发生慢性GHI,并且与抑郁和生活质量下降有关。生长激素替代疗法对这些TBI患者的NB功能和生活质量的影响正在一项随机安慰剂对照试验中进行测试。