GH-releasing peptide-2 does not stimulate arginine vasopressin secretion in healthy men.
Kamoi. Kyuzi K; Minagawa. Shinichi S; Kimura. Keita K; Ishizawa. Masahiro M; Ohara. Nobumasa N; Uemura. Yasuyuki Y; Tsuchiya. Junpei J
Key Findings
- GHRP‑2 causes a strong, rapid increase in GH (peak at ~30 min) and also raises ACTH and prolactin.
- Fasting before the GHRP‑2 injection makes the hormone spikes significantly larger than when fed.
- GHRP‑2 does NOT stimulate arginine vasopressin (AVP) release, nor does it affect blood pressure, hematocrit, or plasma osmolality.
Practical Outcomes
- If you’re using GHRP‑2 to boost GH, taking it in a fasted state (e.g., first thing in the morning before eating) should give a bigger hormonal response. There’s no need to worry about water‑retention or blood‑pressure changes from AVP, as GHRP‑2 doesn’t affect that pathway. This data supports using GHRP‑2 as a GH‑stimulating tool, but not for influencing vasopressin‑related functions.
Summary
In healthy men, a single IV dose of GHRP‑2 spikes growth hormone (GH), ACTH and prolactin, especially when taken after an overnight fast, but it does NOT raise the water‑balance hormone vasopressin (AVP). Blood pressure, blood‑cell volume and plasma osmolality stay unchanged.
Abstract
Ghrelin has a stimulating effect on arginine vasopressin (AVP). However, it is not known whether GHRP-2, a synthetic ghrelin receptor agonist, also has a stimulating effect on AVP release in men. To determine whether the GHRP-2 test is useful for assessing AVP secretion, blood ACTH, GH, FSH, LH, PRL, TSH and AVP levels, as well as glucose, osmolality, sodium and hematocrit, were measured before and 15, 30, 45 and 60 min after an intravenous bolus of 100 microg GHRP-2 in 10 healthy men with and without fasting. Blood pressure was measured at 15-min intervals. AVP secretion was not stimulated by the GHRP-2 test with and without fasting. There were no significant differences in hematocrit, blood pressure and plasma osmolality before and after GFRP-2 injection, although significant (p<0.001) peak blood GH, and ACTH and PRL levels were observed 30 and 15 min after GHRP-2 injection with and without fasting, respectively, and the maximal peaks were significantly (p<0.05) higher with fasting than without fasting. These results suggest that AVP secretion is not stimulated by the GHRP-2 test both with and without fasting, though GH, ACTH and PRL levels were higher with than without fasting.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-11-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1507/endocrj.k09e-215