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Hexarelin

Examorelin, HEX

Quick Stats
Studies 233
Trials 61
Score 2
2000 pubmed

The influence of sex and gonadectomy on the growth hormone and corticosterone response to hexarelin in the rat.

Sibilia. V V; Cocchi. D D; Pagani. F F; Pecile. A A; Netti. C C

Key Findings

  • Hexarelin causes a significantly larger GH increase in male rats compared to female rats.
  • The sex‑difference in GH response remains after gonadectomy, indicating it is not driven by circulating sex hormones.
  • Hexarelin raises corticosterone (stress hormone) more sharply in males, while females show a delayed and smaller rise, likely due to higher baseline levels and feedback inhibition.

Practical Outcomes

  • If you’re using hexarelin (or similar GH‑releasing peptides) in humans, expect a stronger GH response in men than women and be aware it may also spike cortisol, especially in men. Consider monitoring stress‑hormone levels and possibly adjusting dose or timing based on gender to avoid unwanted cortisol‑related side effects.

Summary

In rats, the GH‑boosting peptide hexarelin triggers a much bigger growth‑hormone surge in males than in females, and this gender gap stays even when the animals’ sex hormones are removed. It also raises stress‑hormone (corticosterone) levels, but the timing and size of that rise differ between sexes – men‑like rats get a quick boost, while women‑like rats see a delayed, smaller increase.

Abstract

The present study is designed to investigate the role of sex and gonadal status in the growth hormone (GH) and corticosterone response to hexarelin (HEXA), a GH-releasing peptide, which also causes a stimulatory action on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. HEXA (80 microg/Kg) was administered intracarotid to anesthetized intact or gonadectomized male (ORC) and female (OVX) middle-aged rats. The GH stimulatory response to HEXA was gender-related since the GH increase was significantly (p < 0.001) higher in intact males (area under the curve, AUC= 12560 +/- 1784 ng/ml.45 min) than in females (AUC= 4628 +/- 257 ng/ml.45 min). This sex difference does not depend on circulating gonadal steroids since it persists in ORC (AUC = 11980 +/- 1136 ng/ml.45 min) and OVX (AUC = 5539 +/- 614 ng/ml.45 min) rats. The different effects of HEXA on corticosterone secretion detected in male and female rats are probably dependent on the prevailing activity of the HPA axis. In fact, in male rats that have low basal corticosterone levels, HEXA caused an increase in corticosterone secretion, which was significantly (p< 0.05) higher in ORC than in intact rats. The increase in corticosterone secretion by HEXA both in intact and OVX females was delayed, probably due to the elevated initial corticosterone levels, which could have activated the glucocorticoid negative feedback. We suggest that gender-specific patterns in the regulation of the hypothalamus-pituitary function could be responsible for the GH and corticosterone sexually differentiated responses to HEXA.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2000

Date

2000-12-08T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00940-1