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Selank

Selanc, TP-7

Quick Stats
Studies 114
Trials 11
Score 1
2000 pubmed

Effect of testosterone on n-methyl-d, l-aspartate-induced growth hormone secretion in male swine.

McElwain. K V KV; Estienne. M J MJ; Barb. C R CR

Key Findings

  • Testosterone levels were similar in boars and testosterone‑treated barrows, and much higher than in untreated barrows.
  • NMA injection raised growth hormone about the same amount in all groups.
  • Testosterone did not modify the NMA‑induced growth hormone response in male pigs.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this suggests testosterone isn’t needed to enhance growth hormone spikes from NMA‑type agents. The findings are specific to pigs and may not translate to humans, so they offer little actionable guidance for personal protocols.

Summary

In a pig study, giving testosterone didn’t change how a glutamate‑like compound (NMA) raised growth hormone levels. Both intact males and castrated males given testosterone showed the same hormone boost as castrated males without testosterone.

Abstract

Previous research from our laboratory demonstrated that n-methyl-d, l-aspartate (NMA), a potent agonist of glutamate, increased growth hormone (GH) secretion in barrows and boars. To determine if testosterone modulates NMA-induced GH secretion, Poland China x Yorkshire swine were challenged with NMA in a model that compared GH responses in boars with those of barrows or barrows treated with testosterone propionate (TP). Boars and barrows weighing 112.6+/-1.4 kg (mean +/- SE) were fitted with indwelling jugular vein catheters. Barrows (n = 16) were given i.m. injections of TP (25 mg in corn oil) twice daily from d 0 to d 6. Boars (n = 16) and control barrows (n = 15) received twice daily injections of corn oil. On d 6, blood was sampled every 15 min for 4 h. Two h after sampling began, all animals received an i.v. injection of NMA at a dose of 2.5 mg/kg body weight. Mean testosterone concentrations (ng/ml serum) were similar (P > .1) for boars (8.1+/-0.8) and barrows receiving TP (7.3+/-0.3), but were greater in both cases (P < .05) than for barrows receiving corn oil (.2+/-.01). Prior to NMA injections, mean GH concentrations were similar (P > .1) among groups and averaged 2.7+/-.2 ng/ml serum across treatments. Serum concentrations of GH after NMA increased (P < .05) similarly among groups and averaged 6.3+/-0.3 ng/ml across treatments during the 2-h period after injection. These results were not supportive of a role for testosterone as a modulator of NMA-induced GH secretion in male swine.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2000

Date

2000-11-24T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00913-9