Identification of the growth-hormone-releasing peptide-2 (GHRP-2) in a nutritional supplement.
Thomas. Andreas A; Kohler. Maxie M; Mester. Joachim J; Geyer. Hans H; Schänzer. Wilhelm W; Petrou. Michael M; Thevis. Mario M
Key Findings
- GHRP‑2 was identified and measured in a commercial nutritional supplement.
- Each tablet contained roughly 50 µg of GHRP‑2.
- The detection used advanced liquid chromatography‑mass spectrometry, highlighting the lack of routine testing for such peptides.
Practical Outcomes
- If you use unverified supplements, you might unintentionally ingest a potent HGH‑secretagogue with legal and health implications. This finding urges biohackers to verify supplement contents, avoid hidden GHRP‑2, and consider testing or sticking to vetted products.
Summary
A study discovered that a dietary supplement sold over the counter actually contains the powerful growth‑hormone‑releasing peptide GHRP‑2, about 50 micrograms per tablet. This peptide boosts HGH, is banned in sports, and can have serious health risks if used without medical supervision.
Abstract
Black market products of a pharmaceutical nature and nutritional supplements have received substantial and increasing attention because of potential performance enhancement in elite and non-professional sports. In addition, improved general health is claimed for non-competing individuals. The risks and foreseeable dangers of the uncontrolled use of highly potent and non-approved pharmaceutical compounds in healthy individuals are of considerable concern. In the present case report, the emerging drug candidate GHRP-2 with verified growth-hormone-releasing properties was identified and quantified in tablets offered as an over-the-counter nutritional supplement. The impact of this orally active peptide on the hGH/IGF-axis has been established for several years and its illicit use in elite sports has been assumed. As a releasing factor for hGH, GHRP-2 belongs to the list of substances prohibited by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). Unfortunately, to date there is no routinely performed assay for the determination of these peptides potentially occurring in biological fluids of competing athletes, but the present data will facilitate the implementation by providing principle analytical information on liquid chromatographic and mass spectrometric behaviour. Qualitative identification of the target analyte after extraction from the tablet matrix was performed by high resolution/high accuracy mass spectrometry after liquid chromatographic separation under consideration of the accurate masses and the ratios of the protonated molecules and their fragment ions derived from their collisionally induced dissociation. Quantitative results were obtained by means of liquid chromatography coupled to a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer and linear regression using an external calibration curve (with GHRP-2 reference compound) adjusted via internal standard (Hexarelin). Hereby, the content of GHRP-2 was determined with approximately 50 µg per tablet.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/dta.120
58
13