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GHRP-2

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

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
Score 4
2004 pubmed

Contributions of gender and systemic estradiol and testosterone concentrations to maximal secretagogue drive of burst-like growth hormone secretion in healthy middle-aged and older adults.

Veldhuis. Johannes D JD; Patrie. James T JT; Brill. Kimberly T KT; Weltman. Judith Y JY; Mueller. Eugenio E EE; Bowers. Cyril Y CY; Weltman. Arthur A

Key Findings

  • GHRP‑2 caused the largest GH increase of all tested secretagogues, especially in men.
  • Individual estradiol (r=0.80) and testosterone (r=0.63) levels strongly predicted the GH response to GHRP‑2; together they explained 86% of the variance (r=0.86).
  • Gender interacted with stimulus type: men outperformed women after GHRP‑2 and somatostatin rebound, while women showed higher baseline GH after saline.

Practical Outcomes

  • If you’re using GHRP‑2 to boost growth hormone, measuring your testosterone and estradiol can help estimate how effective it will be. Men may see a more pronounced GH lift, so dosing could be lower than in women. Adjusting hormone status (e.g., optimizing testosterone in men or estradiol in women) before GHRP‑2 administration may enhance the desired GH response.

Summary

In healthy middle‑aged adults, the growth‑hormone‑releasing peptide GHRP‑2 triggers a big GH surge, but how big that surge is depends a lot on whether you’re male or female and on your blood levels of testosterone and estradiol. Men generally get a stronger response than women, and people with higher sex‑hormone levels see the biggest GH spikes.

Abstract

To test whether concentrations of estradiol and testosterone predict GH responses to mechanistically distinct secretagogues in healthy older adults, we studied 16 volunteers (n = 10 men, n = 6 women, age 49-72 yr) in each of six randomly ordered sessions as follows: 1) saline; 2) l-arginine; 3) aerobic exercise; 4) GHRH; 5) GH-releasing peptide (GHRP)-2; and 6) somatostatin-induced rebound. Statistical comparisons disclosed that stimulus type (P < 0.001) and the interaction between gender and stimulus type (P = 0.023) determine GH secretion. In women, each secretagogue, except exercise and somatostatin-induced rebound, stimulated GH secretion by 2.6- to 6.4-fold over saline/rest (P < 0.023). In men, somatostatin-induced rebound drove GH secretion by 4.6-fold (P = 0.004), exercise by 16-fold (P < 0.001), and other secretagogues by 18- to 109-fold over saline/rest (each P < 0.001). Gender comparisons disclosed greater GH secretion in men than women after somatostatin-induced rebound (P = 0.008) and GHRP-2 injection (P < 0.001) and conversely greater GH secretion in women than men after saline (P = 0.013). Regression analysis showed that individual concentrations of estradiol (r = 0.80, P = 0.002) and testosterone (r = 0.63, P = 0.008) and their combination (r = 0.86, P < 0.001) strongly predict responses to GHRP-2 only. We conclude that among healthy middle-aged and older adults, the action of GHRP is uniquely determined by gender and physiological concentrations of testosterone and estradiol.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2004

DOI

10.1210/jc.2004-0644