Growth hormone response to low dose intravenous injections of growth hormone releasing factor in obese and normal weight women.
Kopelman. P G PG; Noonan. K K
Key Findings
- Obese women have a reduced GH response to a single high‑dose IV sermorelin injection
- Low‑dose, pulsed IV administration can trigger GH release in some obese women who failed to respond to a large bolus
- A final large bolus after pulsed dosing does not increase GH further, regardless of weight
Practical Outcomes
- If you’re using sermorelin for GH boosting, especially if you’re overweight, a protocol of frequent low‑dose injections (or a continuous low‑rate infusion) may be more effective than one big shot. The data are limited, so start with low doses, monitor IGF‑1 or GH, and adjust cautiously.
Summary
In a small study, obese women showed a weaker growth‑hormone response to a single high‑dose IV shot of sermorelin compared to normal‑weight women. Giving a much lower dose in short, repeated pulses over a few hours sparked a GH rise in some obese participants who didn’t react to the big dose, while adding a final big shot didn’t help.
Abstract
We have recently reported an impaired growth hormone (GH) response to a single i.v. bolus dose of growth hormone releasing factor (1 microgram/kg body weight) in obese women. We have now investigated whether the i.v. administration of low dose GHRF(1-29)NH2 (0.33 microgram/kg/h) by 15 min pulsed injections for 3 h followed by an i.v. bolus (1 microgram/kg) to four normal weight women and six obese women results in an enhancement of GH release. In the control women low dose GHRF, given either as a single 10 microgram injection or in pulses of equivalent total dosage, produced a GH response identical to that seen after a single bolus of 60 micrograms (mean peak GH low dose 30 +/- 2 mU/l, peak GH large dose 30 +/- 0.5 mU/l). In the obese women GH release was significantly less than the controls after low doses of GHRF (P less than 0.01) and the peak was delayed compared to that following a single large bolus dose (peak GH 7 +/- 1.2 mU/l). However, three of the obese women who previously showed no response to a large dose of GHRF did release GH after low dose pulsed injections. The final bolus of GHRF after 3 h of pulsed injections did not elicit any additional GH release in the subjects irrespective of body weight. We conclude that obesity may be characterized by impaired GH release to i.v. GHRF. The finding that some obese women do not respond to a single large dose injection of GHRF but do release GH after low dose pulsed injections supports the hypothesis of a hypothalamic disorder in these women.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Study Information
pubmed
1986
1986-02-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1365-2265.1986.tb00758.x
44
22