Skip to search form
Skip to main content
Skip to account menu
Semantic Scholar
Semantic Scholar's Logo
Search 222,886,002 papers from all fields of science
Search
Sign In
Create Free Account
L 692585
Known as:
L 692,585
, L-692,585
, L-692585
National Institutes of Health
Create Alert
Alert
Related topics
Related topics
2 relations
Broader (2)
Benzazepines
Tetrazoles
Papers overview
Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
2010
2010
Intracerebroventricular and intravenous administration of growth hormone secretagogue L-692,585, somatostatin, neuropeptide Y and galanin in pig: dose-dependent effects on growth hormone secretion.
Sang-Joon Cho
,
Jin Sook Lee
,
+4 authors
L. Anderson
Comparative biochemistry and physiology…
2010
Corpus ID: 5782388
2009
2009
An Investigation into the pharmacology of the ghrelin receptor
K. Bennett
2009
Corpus ID: 83621369
The ghrelin receptor (GRLN-R) was cloned in 1996 after the discovery that a series of synthetic growth hormone-releasing…
Expand
Highly Cited
2003
Highly Cited
2003
Stimulatory Effect of Ghrelin on Isolated Porcine Somatotropes
A. Glavaski-Joksimovic
,
K. Jeftinija
,
C. Scanes
,
L. Anderson
,
S. Jeftinija
Neuroendocrinology
2003
Corpus ID: 45941576
Research on the mechanism for growth hormone secretagogue (GHS) induction of growth hormone secretion led to the discovery of the…
Expand
2002
2002
Mechanism of action of the growth hormone secretagogue, L-692,585, on isolated porcine somatotropes.
A. Glavaski-Joksimovic
,
K. Jeftinija
,
Aleksandar Jeremic
,
Lloyd L. Anderson
,
S. Jeftinija
Journal of Endocrinology
2002
Corpus ID: 9699657
The effects of a GH secretagogue, L-692,585 (L-585), and human GH-releasing hormone (hGHRH) on calcium transient and GH release…
Expand
1995
1995
Consistent GH responses to repeated injection of GH-releasing hexapeptide (GHRP-6) and the non-peptide GH secretagogue, L-692,585.
K. Fairhall
,
A. Mynett
,
R G Smith
,
I. Robinson
Journal of Endocrinology
1995
Corpus ID: 13546870
GH release is normally stimulated by the naturally occurring GH-releasing factor (GRF). However, smaller GH-releasing peptides…
Expand
By clicking accept or continuing to use the site, you agree to the terms outlined in our
Privacy Policy
(opens in a new tab)
,
Terms of Service
(opens in a new tab)
, and
Dataset License
(opens in a new tab)
ACCEPT & CONTINUE