General pharmacology of KP-102 (GHRP-2), a potent growth hormone-releasing peptide.
Furuta. Sadayoshi S; Shimada. Osafumi O; Doi. Naomi N; Ukai. Kiyoharu K; Nakagawa. Terutake T; Watanabe. Jyo J; Imaizumi. Masakazu M
Key Findings
- GHRP-2 reliably increases growth hormone secretion in animals.
- No major side effects were observed on the central or autonomic nervous system, cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, renal, or hematologic systems at GH‑active doses.
- Only a slight, temporary increase in gut motility was seen at very high concentrations.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in GH‑boosting, the study supports that GHRP-2 can be used at doses that raise GH without obvious acute toxicity in animal models. It provides a safety baseline for designing low‑to‑moderate dosing protocols, but human data are still needed before assuming the same safety profile in people.
Summary
GHRP-2 (also called KP-102) is a short peptide that strongly stimulates growth hormone release by acting on the brain and pituitary. In animal tests, doses that boost GH did not cause noticeable problems in the nervous system, heart, lungs, kidneys, or blood, with only tiny, short‑lived effects on gut muscle at very high amounts. This suggests the peptide is relatively safe at the levels needed to raise GH.
Abstract
The general pharmacological effects of the hexapeptide KP-102 (D-alanyl-3-(2-naphthyl)-D-alanyl-L-alanyl-L-tryptophyl-D-phenylalanyl-L-lysinamide dihydrochloride, growth hormone-releasing peptide-2, GHRP-2, pralmorelin, CAS 158861-67-7), which potently promotes growth hormone (GH) release by acting at both hypothalamic and pituitary sites, were evaluated in various animal experimental models. The administration of KP-102 showed no obvious effect at a pharmacological dose on the central nervous system. KP-102 had no significant effect on the autonomic nervous system and smooth muscle except a slight and transient increase in spontaneous motility of isolated rabbit ileum and contraction of isolated guinea pig ileum at high doses. There was negligible effect on the respiratory and cardiovascular systems, digestive system, renal function and blood system after KP-102 treatment. These results suggest that KP-102 has no serious general pharmacological effects at dose levels showing GH-releasing activity in the experimental animals. Therefore, it is concluded that KP-102 will be a useful drug for the diagnosis of serious GH deficiency and for treatment of short stature.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
2004-12-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1055/s-0031-1297042
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