Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

Sermorelin

GHRH (1-29), GRF 1-29 NH2, Sermorelin acetate

Quick Stats
Studies 223
Trials 41
Score 4
1987 pubmed 125 citations

GH feedback occurs through modulation of hypothalamic somatostatin under cholinergic control: studies with pyridostigmine and GHRH.

Ross. R J RJ; Tsagarakis. S S; Grossman. A A; Nhagafoong. L L; Touzel. R J RJ; Rees. L H LH; Besser. G M GM

Key Findings

  • Pyridostigmine raises baseline GH and amplifies the GH response to GHRH
  • GH negative feedback via somatostatin can be overridden by increased cholinergic tone
  • The combined effect of pyridostigmine and GHRH is greater than the sum of each alone

Practical Outcomes

  • If you’re using sermorelin or another GHRH peptide, adding a low dose of a cholinesterase inhibitor like pyridostigmine might enhance GH spikes and reduce feedback suppression. Start with very low doses, monitor for side effects (e.g., excess sweating, GI upset), and consider short‑term trials before making it a regular part of a protocol.

Summary

The study shows that boosting the body's cholinergic activity with pyridostigmine can raise natural growth hormone (GH) levels and make the body respond more strongly to GH‑releasing hormone (like sermorelin). It also appears to block the usual feedback that stops GH release, likely by lowering somatostatin. For biohackers, this hints that pairing a mild cholinergic enhancer with a GHRH peptide could give a bigger GH boost, but the research is tiny and short‑term, so safety and dosing need careful consideration.

Abstract

We have studied the effect of increased cholinergic tone on the GH response to growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and on GH feedback, using pyridostigmine, an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor. In six healthy male adult volunteers 120 mg oral pyridostigmine increased basal GH secretion compared to placebo and augmented the GH response to 100 micrograms i.v. GHRH (1-29) NH2; the effect was more than the additive effect of pyridostigmine and GHRH when each was given alone. Pretreatment with 2 IU methionyl-hGH given i.v. abolished the serum GH response to GHRH given 3 h later, demonstrating a negative feedback loop of GH on the response to GHRH; this inhibited response to GHRH was restored in subjects given pyridostigmine as well as methionyl-hGH. The data demonstrate that enhanced cholinergic tone releases GH, augments the serum GH response to GHRH and unblocks the negative feedback effect of methionyl-hGH pretreatment on the GH response to GHRH. These results suggest that GH negative feedback effects on its own secretion occur predominantly through increased hypothalamic somatostatin secretion; this somatostatin secretion is under inhibitory cholinergic control.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1987

Date

1987-12-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2265.1987.tb02957.x

Citations

125

References

21