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GHRP-2

Pralmorelin, Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-2, KP-102

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
Score 4
2004 pubmed

Determinants of dual secretagogue drive of burst-like growth hormone secretion in premenopausal women studied under a selective estradiol clamp.

Erickson. Dana D; Keenan. Daniel M DM; Farhy. Leon L; Mielke. Kristi K; Bowers. Cyril Y CY; Veldhuis. Johannes D JD

Key Findings

  • Estradiol (E2) significantly amplifies GH secretion triggered by GHRP‑2 (and other secretagogues).
  • Higher E2 raises fasting GH levels, increases the mass of GH released in bursts, and speeds up the initial GH release.
  • Visceral (abdominal) fat inversely predicts the GH response to secretagogues, dampening the effect.

Practical Outcomes

  • For women using GHRP‑2 to raise GH, maintaining healthy estrogen levels—through natural cycles, hormone therapy, or supplements—can boost the peptide’s effectiveness. Keeping visceral fat low will also enhance GH spikes. Pairing GHRP‑2 with arginine (or GHRH) may provide the strongest GH response, especially when estrogen is optimized.

Summary

In healthy pre‑menopausal women, having normal estradiol levels makes the GH‑boosting peptide GHRP‑2 work better. When estrogen was kept steady, the women showed higher fasting GH, bigger GH bursts, and a faster GH release after taking GHRP‑2 (especially with arginine). Extra belly fat reduced this effect, so leaner bodies respond more strongly.

Abstract

The present study tests the hypothesis that estradiol (E(2)), compared with placebo (Pl), amplifies combined-secretagogue stimulation of GH secretion in premenopausal women studied at comparable IGF-I and testosterone concentrations. To this end, 13 women underwent GnRH agonist-induced gonadal down-regulation followed by graded transdermal addback of E(2) or Pl and randomly ordered iv infusions of saline or paired secretagogues on separate morning fasting. GH secretion was assessed by frequent blood sampling, immunochemiluminometry, and variable-waveform deconvolution analysis. Two-way ANOVA revealed that specific secretagogue combination (P < 0.001), E(2) status (P = 0.012), and their interaction (P = 0.038) jointly determined GH secretory-burst mass. Compared with Pl, the E(2)-clamped milieu elevated mean fasting GH concentrations (P = 0.032), the mass of GH secreted in bursts (P = 0.037), and maximal stimulation by paired l-arginine/GH-releasing peptide (GHRP)-2 (P = 0.028). E(2) also markedly accelerated the initial release of GH induced by GHRH/GHRP-2 (P < 0.001) and l-arginine/GHRH (P < 0.01). By linear regression analysis, E(2) concentrations positively forecast 41% of intersubject variability in GH secretion stimulated by combined l-arginine/GHRP-2 (P = 0.018), whereas abdominal visceral-fat mass negatively predicted 49% of that due to l-arginine/GHRH (P = 0.012). These data indicate that pulsatile GH secretion in young women studied at constant IGF-I and testosterone concentrations is dictated 3-fold jointly by secretagogue pair, E(2) availability, and intraabdominal adiposity. Moreover, the rapidity of GH release is controlled 2-fold jointly by E(2) and GHRH.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2004

Date

2004-12-21T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1210/jc.2004-1621