In mammals, after a period of growth inhibition, body growth often does not just return to a normal rate but actually exceeds the normal rate, resulting in catch-up growth. Recent evidence suggests that catch-up growth occurs because growth-inhibiting conditions delay progression of the physiological mechanisms that normally cause body growth to slow and cease with age. As a result, following the period of growth inhibition, tissues retain a greater proliferative capacity than normal, and therefore grow more rapidly than normal for age. There is evidence that this mechanism contributes both to catch-up growth in terms of body length, which involves proliferation in the growth plate, and to catch-up growth in terms of organ mass, which involves proliferation in multiple nonskeletal tissues.
CITATION STYLE
Finkielstain, G. P., Lui, J. C., & Baron, J. (2013). Catch-up growth: Cellular and molecular mechanisms. In World Review of Nutrition and Dietetics (Vol. 106, pp. 100–104). S. Karger AG. https://doi.org/10.1159/000342535
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.