GHRP-6
Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6, Growth hormone-releasing hexapeptide, His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2
The effect of an opiate antagonist on the hormonal changes induced by hexarelin.
Korbonits. M M; Trainer. P J PJ; Besser. G M GM
Key Findings
- Hexarelin sharply increases GH release, independent of opioid receptors.
- Hexarelin also raises prolactin, cortisol, and ACTH levels.
- Naloxone alone stimulates cortisol and ACTH but does not affect GH or prolactin; combined with hexarelin the cortisol/ACTH rise is less than additive.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, using GHRP‑6/hexarelin will reliably raise GH without needing to worry about opioid interactions. Expect a modest rise in cortisol, ACTH, and prolactin, which may affect stress response and water balance, so monitor these hormones if you’re sensitive. Adding an opioid antagonist like naloxone won’t boost GH and isn’t needed in a GHRP protocol.
Summary
Hexarelin (a growth‑hormone‑releasing peptide) boosts GH, prolactin, cortisol and ACTH in healthy people, and this effect isn’t blocked by the opioid blocker naloxone. Naloxone on its own raises cortisol and ACTH but doesn’t change GH or prolactin. Using both together doesn’t add up their stress‑hormone effects.
Abstract
Growth hormone-releasing peptides (GHRPs) stimulate growth hormone (GH) release in vitro and in vivo in animals and in humans. GHRPs were developed by modification of the structure of met-enkephalin but GHRP-6 does not activate opiod receptors in animal studies. These agents may well have diagnostic and/or long-term therapeutic potential in the future so their effects on opiod receptors need to be clarified in humans as well. Hexarelin is a recently developed six amino acid residue GHRP. We have investigated the effects of 100 micrograms/kg i.v. dose of the opiate antagonist naloxone and 2 micrograms/kg i.v. hexarelin or placebo on serum GH, prolactin, TSH, cortisol and plasma ACTH in 12 healthy volunteers in a double-blind, randomized trial. Hexarelin significantly stimulated the peak serum levels and area under the curve for circulating GH and this effect was not modulated by naloxone. Hexarelin also caused significant elevation of circulating prolactin, cortisol and ACTH but did not influence circulating TSH levels. The effect of naloxone on cortisol and ACTH was stimulatory, while it did not influence prolactin, GH and TSH levels. The effect of the two drugs together on cortisol and ACTH was less than additive. This study confirms that the activation of opiate receptors does not play a role in the GH-releasing effect of growth hormone-releasing peptides in humans.
Study Information
pubmed
1995
1995-09-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1365-2265.1995.tb02045.x
53
39