Systematic review of ghrelin response to food intake in pediatric age, from neonates to adolescents

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Abstract

Objective: Food intake and energy balance are regulated during the lifespan with critical changes in each specific period (infancy, adulthood, aging). Some of ghrelin's changes may contribute to the regulation of food intake and weight in children. We aimed to analyze the ghrelin response to feeding in lean or obese subjects from birth to adolescence. Methods: We searched PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar, Cochrane, and EMBASE (December 1999 to February 2013) and identified 62 relevant articles, of which 29 were suitable to be included. Results and Conclusions: Total ghrelin response to meals is particular, with refractoriness in neonates and lean children and an inhibition that starts from puberty. Total ghrelin levels are decreased after meals, irrespective of pubertal stages in obese children and adolescents. Conversely, total ghrelin is decreased after an oral glucose tolerance test in all ages, with the exception of neonates. Data on unacylated ghrelin response are scant but resemble those of total ghrelin. The acylated ghrelin response to meals or oral glucose tolerance test is discordant, although a precocious inhibition followed by a rise back is present in both lean and obese children. The post-feeding profile in children with Prader-Willi syndrome is also peculiar, with a conserved and deeper inhibition of all ghrelin forms. © 2014 by the Endocrine Society.

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Prodam, F., Monzani, A., Ricotti, R., Marolda, A., Bellone, S., Aimaretti, G., … Bona, G. (2014). Systematic review of ghrelin response to food intake in pediatric age, from neonates to adolescents. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 99(5), 1556–1568. https://doi.org/10.1210/jc.2013-4010

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