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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
Score 2
1988 pubmed 10 citations

Growth hormone-releasing factor on growth hormone secretion in prepubertal calves.

Plouzek. C A CA; Vale. W W; Rivier. J J; Anderson. L L LL; Trenkle. A A

Key Findings

  • A dose of 0.067–0.1 ”g hpGRF/kg caused plasma GH to rise within 5‑15 min in prepubertal calves.
  • Repeated injections (every 3–4 h) produced GH spikes in roughly 50% of the doses.
  • Over 10 days, GRF‑treated calves showed modest (≈16‑36%) increases in nitrogen retention, somatomedin C, and weight gain, but these changes were not statistically different from controls.

Practical Outcomes

  • GRF‑1‑29 can trigger a rapid, short‑lived GH surge in young animals, suggesting it could be used for brief GH spikes. However, the modest and inconsistent anabolic effects in calves mean there’s little evidence it will reliably boost muscle or weight in humans, and dosing protocols are not established. Biohackers should treat these results as preliminary and await human studies before applying GRF‑1‑29 for performance or longevity.

Summary

In young calves, a single injection of growth hormone‑releasing factor (GRF‑1‑29) caused a quick rise in growth hormone within 5‑15 minutes, but the hormone level fell back to normal soon after. Giving the peptide every few hours produced GH spikes only about half the time, and over 10 days the calves showed small, not statistically clear, improvements in nitrogen retention, a growth‑related protein, and weight gain.

Abstract

The effects of iv administration of growth hormone-releasing factor (GRF) on growth hormone (GH) release and on nitrogen metabolism were measured in prepubertal calves. Crossbred beef heifers (111 kg) were used in a Latin square design to test the effects of 0, 0.01, 0.033, 0.067, and 0.1 microgram human pancreatic (hp) GRF [hpGRF (1,40)OH]/kg body wt on plasma GH concentrations. When they were given doses of 0.067 and 0.1 microgram hpGRF/kg body wt, plasma GH increased (P less than 0.05) within 5-15 min, compared with injections of control buffer, and then returned to preinjection concentrations. The response to 0.067 microgram hpGRF/kg body wt every 3 hr for 42 hr was studied in five heifers (137 kg body wt). The animals responded to 50% of the GRF injections with an increase in plasma GH during every 6-hr period measured. Nitrogen retention, hormone concentrations, and weight gain were measured in five bull calves (90 kg body wt) administered 0 or 0.067 microgram Nle rat hypothalamic GRF (1,29)NH2/kg body wt every 4 hr for 10 days. Metabolic parameters were interpreted to indicate an anabolic response to GRF even though increases of 16% in nitrogen retention, 23% in plasma somatomedin C concentrations, and 36% in weight gain with pulsatile GRF treatment were variable and statistically similar to those of controls. These results indicate that GRF induces peak GH secretion within 15 min in prepubertal calves and that calves can respond to multiple injections of GRF with an increase in plasma GH.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1988

Date

1988-06-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3181/00379727-188-42728

Citations

10

References

23