GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
Decreased GH secretion and enhanced ACTH and cortisol release after ghrelin administration in Cushing's disease: comparison with GH-releasing peptide-6 (GHRP-6) and GHRH.
Correa-Silva. Silvia Regina SR; Nascif. Sérgio Oliva SO; Lengyel. Ana-Maria Judith AM
Key Findings
- GH release after ghrelin or GHRP‑6 is blunted in Cushing's disease compared with healthy controls.
- ACTH and cortisol responses to ghrelin and GHRP‑6 are markedly higher in Cushing's disease than in controls.
- Ghrelin fails to increase glucose levels in Cushing's patients, unlike in healthy subjects.
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, this study doesn’t change how you’d use GHRP‑6, since it was done in a disease group not typical for self‑experimentation. It does suggest that people with excess cortisol might see stronger stress‑hormone spikes from GHRP‑6, so caution is advised if you have adrenal issues. Otherwise, the findings mainly confirm known GH‑boosting effects in healthy individuals.
Summary
In people with Cushing's disease (high cortisol levels), giving ghrelin or the peptide GHRP‑6 raises growth hormone only a little, but it spikes stress hormones (ACTH and cortisol) a lot. Healthy volunteers show a much bigger growth‑hormone boost and only modest stress‑hormone changes. Also, ghrelin doesn’t raise blood sugar in Cushing's patients like it does in healthy people.
Abstract
GH responsiveness to GH secretagogues (GHS) is blunted in Cushing's disease (CD), while ACTH/cortisol responses are enhanced, by mechanisms still unclear. Ghrelin, the endogenous ligand for GHS-receptors (GHS-R), increases GH, ACTH, cortisol and glucose levels in humans. This study evaluated the GH, ACTH, cortisol and glucose-releasing effects of ghrelin in CD in comparison with GHRP-6. GHRH-induced GH release was also studied. Ten patients with CD (BMI 26.9+/-1.0 kg/m(2)) and ten controls (BMI 24.4+/-1.1 kg/m(2)) received ghrelin (1 microg/kg), GHRP-6 (1 microg/kg) and GHRH (100 microg) separately. GH, ACTH, cortisol and glucose levels were measured. In CD ghrelin-induced GH (microg/L; mean +/- SE) release (peak: 7.2+/-3.0) was higher than seen with GHRP-6 (2.7+/-1.0) and GHRH (0.7+/-0.2), but lower than in controls (ghrelin: 58.3+/-12.1; GHRP-6: 22.9+/-4.8; GHRH: 11.3+/-3.7). In controls ACTH (pg/mL) release after ghrelin (79.2+/-26.8) was higher than after GHRP-6 (23.6+/-5.7). In CD these responses (ghrelin: 192+/-43; GHRP-6: 185+/-56) were similar, and enhanced compared to controls. The same was observed with cortisol. Glucose levels failed to increase after ghrelin in CD, differently than in controls. Our data suggests that hypothalamic and pituitary pathways of GH release activated by ghrelin, GHRP-6 and GHRH are deranged in chronic hypercortisolism. The increased ACTH/cortisol responses to ghrelin and GHRP-6 in CD could be mediated by overexpression of GHS-R in ACTH-secreting adenomas. Hypercortisolism apparently impairs the ability of ghrelin to increase glucose levels.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-07-10T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s11102-006-9149-8
20
48