Lack of effect of muscarinic cholinergic blockade on the GH responses to GRF 1-29 and TRH in acromegalic subjects.
Jordan. V V; Dieguez. C C; Valcavi. R R; Artioli. C C; Portioli. I I; Rodriguez-Arnao. M D MD; Gomez-Pan. A A; Hall. R R; Scanlon. M F MF
Key Findings
- Pirenzepine (muscarinic blocker) did not alter GH release after GRF‑1‑29 in acromegalic patients.
- The same lack of effect was seen for GH release after TRH in the same group.
- These results suggest that GH‑producing tumors in acromegaly are functionally disconnected from normal hypothalamic control.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers using GRF‑1‑29 to boost growth hormone, this study indicates that cholinergic blockers are unlikely to affect the peptide’s action in people with acromegaly, but it offers no actionable guidance for healthy individuals. The findings mainly highlight a disease‑specific mechanism rather than informing everyday dosing or protocol tweaks.
Summary
In people with acromegaly (a condition with too much growth hormone), blocking muscarinic cholinergic receptors with the drug pirenzepine did not change how their bodies responded to the growth‑hormone‑releasing peptide GRF‑1‑29 or to TRH. This is different from what happens in healthy people, where such blockade can lower the hormone response.
Abstract
It is well known that muscarinic cholinergic blockade either reduces or abolishes stimulated GH release in normal subjects. In this study we have investigated whether cholinergic muscarinic blockade could reduce the GH responses to GRF 1-29 and TRH in acromegalic subjects. Eight acromegalic subjects underwent two GRF tests (GRF 1-29, 1 microgram/kg i.v.) with and without pirenzepine (0.6 mg/kg, i.v.). A further four of these patients received TRH (200 micrograms/kg, i.v.) on separate occasions with and without pirenzepine (0.6 mg/kg, i.v.). Cholinergic muscarinic blockade did not alter the GH responses to GRF and TRH in patients with acromegaly. These findings are in contrast with previous data reported on the effects of cholinergic blockade on stimulated GH levels in normal subjects and in patients with type I diabetes mellitus and are compatible with the view that somatotroph adenomas are functionally disconnected from hypothalamic control mechanisms.
Study Information
pubmed
1986
1986-04-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1365-2265.1986.tb01646.x
10
18