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GHRP-2

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

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
Score 3
2005 pubmed

GH-releasing peptides improve cardiac dysfunction and cachexia and suppress stress-related hormones and cardiomyocyte apoptosis in rats with heart failure.

Xu. Xiang-Bin XB; Pang. Jin-Jiang JJ; Cao. Ji-Min JM; Ni. Chao C; Xu. Rong-Kun RK; Peng. Xiao-Zhong XZ; Yu. Xiao-Xia XX; Guo. Shu S; Chen. Meng-Chin MC; Chen. Chen C

Key Findings

  • GHRP‑2 increased left‑ventricular ejection fraction and reduced ventricular pressures and size, indicating better heart function.
  • Treated rats gained more body weight and showed less cardiac cachexia compared to untreated heart‑failure rats.
  • Plasma levels of stress hormones (renin, angiotensin II, aldosterone, endothelin‑1, ANP) were significantly lowered by GHRP‑2.
  • The peptide reduced cardiomyocyte apoptosis and raised cardiac GH‑secretagogue receptor mRNA expression.

Practical Outcomes

  • The study suggests GHRP‑2 could have heart‑protective and anti‑cachexia effects in severe heart failure, but it’s an animal model only. Biohackers should view this as early, pre‑clinical evidence and not a ready‑to‑use protocol for humans. More human safety and dosing data are needed before considering any self‑experimentation.

Summary

In rats with pressure‑overload heart failure, giving the peptide GHRP‑2 twice daily for three weeks improved heart pumping ability, reduced the loss of body weight (cachexia), lowered stress‑related hormones, and protected heart cells from dying.

Abstract

Growth hormone (GH)-releasing peptides (GHRP), a class of synthetic peptidyl GH secretagogues, have been reported to exert a cardioprotective effect on cardiac ischemia. However, whether GHRP have a beneficial effect on chronic heart failure (CHF) is unclear, and the present work aims to clarify this issue. At 9 wk after pressure-overload CHF was created by abdominal aortic banding in rats, one of four variants of GHRP (GHRP-1, -2, and -6 and hexarelin, 100 mug/kg) or saline was injected subcutaneously twice a day for 3 wk. Echocardiography and cardiac catheterization were performed to monitor cardiac function and obtain blood samples for hormone assay. GHRP treatment significantly improved left ventricular (LV) function and remodeling in CHF rats, as indicated by increased LV ejection fraction, LV end-systolic pressure, and diastolic posterior wall thickness and decreased LV end-diastolic pressure and LV end-diastolic dimension. GHRP also significantly alleviated development of cardiac cachexia, as shown by increases in body weight and tibial length in CHF rats. Plasma CA, renin, ANG II, aldosterone, endothelin-1, and atrial natriuretic peptide were significantly elevated in CHF rats but were significantly decreased in GHRP-treated CHF rats. GHRP suppressed cardiomyocyte apoptosis and increased cardiac GH secretagogue receptor mRNA expression in CHF rats. GHRP also decreased myocardial creatine kinase release in hypophysectomized rats subjected to acute myocardial ischemia. We conclude that chronic administration of GHRP alleviates LV dysfunction, pathological remodeling, and cardiac cachexia in CHF rats, at least in part by suppressing stress-induced neurohormonal activations and cardiomyocyte apoptosis.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2005

Date

2005-06-10T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1152/ajpheart.01042.2004