Growth hormone responses to growth hormone-releasing hormone (1-29)-NH2 and a D-Ala2 analog in normal men.
Barron. J L JL; Coy. D H DH; Millar. R P RP
Key Findings
- Both GHRH‑1‑29‑NH2 and its D‑Ala2 analog trigger a rapid increase in plasma GH after IV injection
- The D‑Ala2 analog is roughly twice as potent as the regular GHRH‑1‑29‑NH2
- No significant changes in prolactin, thyroid, adrenal, or sex hormones and no serious side effects except brief flushing at the highest dose
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the data confirm that low‑dose GHRH peptides can reliably boost GH without disturbing other hormone systems, suggesting sub‑cutaneous dosing could be effective. The D‑Ala2 version may allow you to use about half the dose of regular sermorelin, but be aware that high doses might cause transient flushing. Long‑term safety and real‑world dosing still need more research.
Summary
The study shows that short IV doses of two growth‑hormone‑releasing‑hormone (GHRH) peptides, including sermorelin (GHRH‑1‑29‑NH2) and a slightly modified version (D‑Ala2), cause a quick rise in growth hormone in healthy men, with the modified peptide being about twice as strong. No other hormones were changed and only mild flushing was seen at the highest dose.
Abstract
Synthetic analogs of growth hormone-releasing hormone, GHRH(1-29)-NH2 and D-Ala2 GHRH(1-29)-NH2 were administered as a bolus intravenous injection to five normal men in a dose range of 0.015 to 0.5 micrograms/kg body weight. Vehicle only was administered in a control study. Peak responses to GHRH analogs occurred at 15 or 30 min. An increase in the integrated plasma growth hormone (GH) response was observed at each dose. The dose-response curve of GHRH(1-29)-NH2 indicated that it has a similar molar potency to GHRH(1-40) and GHRH(1-44). The potency of D-Ala2 GHRH(1-29)-NH2 was approximately twice that of GHRH(1-29)-NH2. Neither analog affected blood levels of PRL, TSH, LH, FSH, ACTH, insulin, glucagon, glucose, cortisol, free thyroxine, and free triiodothyronine. No side effects were noted other than transient flushing with the highest dose administered. The findings demonstrate GHRH(1-29)-NH2 and its D-Ala2 analog are potent stimulators of GH release and have potential application in clinical medicine.
Study Information
pubmed
1985
10.1016/0196-9781(85)90124-x