Results 321 to 330 of about 23,005,860 (400)
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Growth

Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 1979
Freud's concepts on the innate and the experiential, applied as they were essentially to the psychic structure, are discussed because, as Winnicott (1952) indicates, 'the psyche grows out of the soma almost from birth' (see also Bion, 1962). The maternal function is basic to the growth in the first months and, to a lesser extent, is basic all through ...
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Growth hormone-dependent growth failure

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1982
Growth failure may be associated with low serum somatomedin concentrations despite normal to increased concentrations of serum growth hormone. We have recognized five patients who responded to GH administration with an increase in serum Sm and an acceleration in skeletal growth, and have characterized the circulating GH in an homologous human GH ...
T, Frazer   +4 more
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Growth and growth hormone secretion

Journal of Endocrinology, 1988
Growth hormone pulse amplitude is intimately connected with growth in childhood. Its effects are most clear in middle childhood, although the influence of adrenal androgens is probably also important. In infancy, nutrition plays an important part and, in the adolescent growth spurt, the synergism with sex steroids is important. Detailed attention needs
C G, Brook, P C, Hindmarsh, R, Stanhope
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GROWTH HORMONE AND GROWTH

Pediatrics, 1966
THE RECENT cascade of knowledge of the chemistry and physiology of the protein and polypeptide hormones of the pituitary gland has been a consequence of steady progress over the past 20 years in methods of isolation, purification, and assay of these hormones.
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Growth Hormone, Growth Factors and Hematopoiesis

Hormone Research, 1996
Hypocellularity of primary lymphoid organs is a distinctive and reproducible characteristic of aged humans and animals. Similar changes have been reported in both hypophysectomized and dwarf rodents. In the bone marrow of these animals, there is an associated reduction in the number of erythroid, lymphoid and myeloid elements.
Kelley, K.W.   +4 more
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Growth factors and growth control

Current Opinion in Cell Biology, 1990
Polypeptide growth factors are thought to govern a variety of physiological processes such as cell growth, differentiation, embryogenesis, hematopoiesis, and wound repair. Although it is well documented that growth factors are required for cell proliferation in tissue-culture systems, current knowledge of their in uivo functions is still meager.
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