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GHRP-6

Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2

Quick Stats
Studies 702
Trials 0
Score 2
2007 pubmed

A single growth hormone determination 30 minutes after the administration of the GHRH plus GHRP-6 test is sufficient for the diagnosis of somatotrope dysfunction in patients who have suffered traumatic brain injury.

Castro. A I AI; Lage. M M; Peino. R R; Kelestimur. F F; Dieguez. C C; Casanueva. F F FF

Key Findings

  • A single GH measurement taken 30 minutes after GHRH + GHRP‑6 injection closely matches the true GH peak (correlation r = 0.972).
  • Only 5 out of 83 participants were re‑classified when using the 30‑minute value versus the full secretory profile.
  • The GHRH + GHRP‑6 test is safe, quick, and can be simplified to one fixed‑time blood draw without losing diagnostic accuracy.

Practical Outcomes

  • For self‑experimenters, this confirms that GHRP‑6 triggers a rapid GH surge that peaks around 30 minutes, so any timing of effects or blood tests should focus on that window. However, the study’s main value is clinical diagnosis of GH deficiency, not a new performance‑enhancing protocol.

Summary

The study shows that after giving a combined dose of GHRH and the peptide GHRP-6, the body’s growth hormone spikes within the first half‑hour. Measuring growth hormone just once at 30 minutes works almost as well as tracking the whole hormone curve for spotting a deficiency in people who had a brain injury.

Abstract

As hypopituitarism is frequent in patients who have suffered a traumatic brain injury (TBI) a hormonal check-up is necessary. However, the prevalence of TBI is so large that the number of potential candidates to be tested is difficult to manage, in particular for GH deficiency diagnosis that requires cumbersome and expensive dynamic tests. GHRH plus GH-releasing hexapeptide (GHRP-6) is a safe and effective test capable of segregating normal subjects from GH deficient patients. As the GHRH+GHRP-6 test induces GH peaks consistently in the first 30 min, the working hypothesis assessed in this study was whether a single determination of GH 30 min after stimulus could provide the same biochemical classification as the whole secretory curve. A total of 83 subjects who suffered TBI at least one year before the study were administered GHRH 1 mug/kg iv plus GHRP-6 1 mug/kg iv at 0 min, and blood samples were obtained at regular intervals. GH was determined in all samples. An excellent correlation was observed between GH values at 30 min and GH peaks (r=0.972, p<0.0001). When comparing the 30-min GH values against the peaks, the biochemical classification changed only in 5 out of 83 subjects from normal GH secretion to uncertain. The GHRH+GHRP-6 test is convenient, safe and in patients with TBI can be reduced to a single fixed GH determination 30 min after stimulus without losing diagnostic power.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2007

DOI

10.1007/bf03347429