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Hexarelin

Examorelin, HEX

Quick Stats
Studies 233
Trials 61
Score 2
2021 pubmed 6 citations

Hexarelin modulates lung mechanics, inflammation, and fibrosis in acute lung injury.

Zambelli. Vanessa V; Rizzi. Laura L; Delvecchio. Paolo P; Bresciani. Elena E; Rezoagli. Emanuele E; Molteni. Laura L; Meanti. Ramona R; Cuttin. Maria Serena MS; Bovo. Giorgio G; Coco. Silvia S; Omeljaniuk. Robert J RJ; Locatelli. Vittorio V; Bellani. Giacomo G; Torsello. Antonio A

Key Findings

  • Hexarelin improved lung compliance 24 h after acid‑induced injury.
  • It lowered total immune cells and neutrophil counts in the lung fluid.
  • Two weeks later, treated mice had less collagen (scar tissue) in their lungs.

Practical Outcomes

  • Hexarelin shows promise as an anti‑inflammatory and anti‑fibrotic agent for acute lung damage in mice, but the study used a high dose (320 µg/kg IP) and was not done in humans. For biohackers, the data are interesting but not ready for self‑experimentation or clinical use without further safety and human efficacy research.

Summary

In a mouse study, giving the peptide hexarelin around the time of a chemically‑induced lung injury helped the lungs stay more flexible, cut down the early flood of immune cells (especially neutrophils), and later reduced scar tissue formation. The effect was seen whether the peptide was given before or after the injury.

Abstract

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is an acute form of diffuse lung injury characterized by (i) an intense inflammatory response, (ii) increased pulmonary vascular permeability, and (iii) the loss of respiratory pulmonary tissue. In this article we explore the therapeutic potential of hexarelin, a synthetic hexapeptide growth hormone secretagogue (GHS), in an experimental model of ARDS. Hexarelin has anti-inflammatory properties and demonstrates cardiovascular-protective activities including the inhibition of cardiomyocyte apoptosis and cardiac fibrosis, both of which may involve the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) system. In our experimental model, ARDS was induced by the instillation of 100 mM HCl into the right bronchus; these mice were treated with hexarelin (320 μg/kg, ip) before (Pre) or after (Post) HCl challenge, or with vehicle. Respiratory system compliance, blood gas analysis, and differential cell counts in a selective bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) were determined 6 or 24 hours after HCl instillation. In an extended study, mice were observed for a subsequent 14 days in order to assess lung fibrosis. Hexarelin induced a significant improvement in lung compliance and a reduction of the number of total immune cells in BAL 24 hours after HCl instillation, accompanied with a lower recruitment of neutrophils compared with the vehicle group. At day 14, hexarelin-treated mice presented with less pulmonary collagen deposition compared with vehicle-treated controls. Our data suggest that hexarelin can inhibit the early phase of the inflammatory response in a murine model of HCl-induced ARDS, thereby blunting lung remodeling processes and fibrotic development.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2021

Date

2021-11-27T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.33393/dti.2021.2347

Citations

6

References

33