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GHRP-2

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

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
Score 3
2002 pubmed

Aging-related changes in release of growth hormone and luteinizing hormone in female rhesus monkeys.

Woller. Michael J MJ; Everson-Binotto. Gina G; Nichols. Elana E; Acheson. Ashley A; Keen. Kim L KL; Bowers. Cyril Y CY; Terasawa. Ei E

Key Findings

  • Aging monkeys have lower overall GH and IGF‑1 levels compared to young monkeys.
  • Injecting GHRP‑2 (alone or with GHRH) increases GH release in both age groups, indicating a synergistic effect.
  • Aged monkeys show higher LH levels as estrogen declines, mirroring menopause‑related hormonal changes.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this suggests that GHRP‑2 can still stimulate GH production in older primates, hinting it might help older humans boost GH, especially when paired with GHRH. However, the data are from monkeys, so human dosing, safety, and effectiveness remain unproven and should be approached cautiously.

Summary

In older female rhesus monkeys, the natural release of growth hormone (GH) drops, while a hormone called LH goes up as estrogen falls. Giving the peptide GHRP‑2, either alone or with another hormone (GHRH), boosts GH levels in both young and old monkeys, showing they work together to raise GH.

Abstract

A decline in somatic function with aging in women is associated with a decrease in GH release and a loss of estrogen after menopause. As an initial step to establish a monkey model for the neuroendocrine mechanisms underlying somatopause and menopause, we have conducted three experiments in unrestrained aged (approximately 25.7-yr-old) and young (approximately 5.4-yr-old) female rhesus monkeys. GH release was pulsatile, and mean GH release and pulse amplitude were significantly lower in aged monkeys than in young monkeys. Injection of GHRH alone, GH-releasing peptide-2 alone, or the combination of both induced an increase in GH release in both age groups. The mean LH level, pulse amplitude, and baseline LH levels were significantly higher in aged animals than in young animals. Both estrogen and IGF-I levels were lower in aged than young monkeys. These results suggest that in female rhesus monkeys 1) there is a clear decline in circulating GH and IGF-I levels with aging; 2) GHRH and GH-releasing peptide-2 stimulate GH release synergistically; and 3) circulating LH levels increase as estrogen decreases with aging. These results indicate that the rhesus monkey is an excellent model for studies of the neuroendocrine mechanisms of aging.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2002

DOI

10.1210/jc.2002-020659