Abstract

The effects of human recombinant growth hormone (rhGH) on regenerating skeletal muscle after ischaemic necrosis and on denervated skeletal muscle were studied in normal adult rats. One group of rats was treated with 4 IE rhGH daily by subcutaneous injections, while control rats were injected with saline. The treatment with rhGH resulted in increased levels of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) in serum. Ischaemic necrosis was achieved in the extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle by cutting the supplying vessels and nerve fascicles at the entrance into the muscle. The wet weight and DNA: protein ration in the regenerating muscle were determined 2 and 4 weeks after the operation. The weight of the regenerating muscles in the rats treated with rhGH during the period of study was larger than in the control rats, while the DNA:protein ratio did not differ significantly between the groups. Denervation of the EDL and soleus muscles followed by subsequent reinnervation was obtained by freezing the sciatic nerve with a forceps chilled in liquid nitrogen. Rats treated with rhGH during the period of denervation and reinnervation, i.e. during the 4 weeks after the freezing of the sciatic nerve, revealed increased weight of both the reinnervated and normal muscles compared to corresponding muscles of control rats. Denervation of the EDL and soleus muscles without subsequent reinnervation was achieved by cutting the sciatic nerve at the level of the thigh. Four weeks after denervation the muscles showed atrophy, mainly affecting type 2 fibres in the EDL muscle and both type 1 and type 2 fibres in the soleus muscle.

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