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Mod GRF 1-29

Sermorelin, Growth Hormone Releasing Hormone (1-29), hGRF(1-29)NH2

Quick Stats
Studies 227
Trials 47
1994 pubmed

Development of homologous radioimmunoassays for equine growth hormone and equine prolactin and their application to the detection of circulating levels of hormone in horse plasma.

Cahill. C M CM; Van der Kolk. H H; Goode. J A JA; Hayden. T J TJ

Key Findings

  • Developed homologous radioimmunoassays for equine growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) with detection limits of 1.2 ng/ml and 0.5 ng/ml respectively.
  • Assay precision was moderate (intra‑assay CV 6.6‑9.1%, inter‑assay CV 10‑15.6%).
  • Measured natural 24‑hour GH and PRL patterns in lactating mares, showing intermittent GH spikes and episodic PRL bursts.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers or N=1 experimenters interested in GRF‑1‑29, this study offers no actionable guidance. It is a methodological report focused on horse hormones, so it does not inform human dosing, safety, or performance protocols.

Summary

The paper describes how scientists built very sensitive lab tests to measure growth hormone and prolactin in horse blood. It shows the detection limits of the tests and reports natural hormone fluctuations in lactating mares, but it does not provide any information on using GRF‑1‑29 in humans or suggest any practical protocols.

Abstract

Highly purified and well-characterised preparations of equine prolactin and growth hormone from equine pituitary glands were employed to set up highly sensitive and specific homologous radioimmunoassays (RIA) for the measurement of hormone in horse plasma. The limit of sensitivity of the GH RIA was 1.2 ng/ml with mean intra- and inter-assay coefficients of variation (CV) of 6.6 and 10%, respectively. The sensitivity of the equine prolactin (ePRL) RIA was 0.5 ng/ml with mean intra and inter-assay CV of 9.1 and 15.6%, respectively. Dose-response curves of a crude pituitary gland extract and plasma samples collected from a mare and foal were parallel to the standards and the PRL RIA was clinically validated by administration of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH). Plasma samples taken at 15 min intervals over 24 h from lactating mares gave 24 h mean GH values in the range 5.5 to 7.95 ng/ml. Large intermittent elevations of GH activity were detected. The mean 24 h PRL concentrations were between 3.2-10.4 ng/ml in the lactating animals, with higher concentrations earlier in lactation. Long episodic bursts of PRL were detected.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1994

DOI

10.1051/rnd:19940404