Growth response to growth hormone-releasing hormone(1-29)-NH2 compared with growth hormone.
Neyzi. O O; Yordam. N N; Ocal. G G; Bundak. R R; Darendeliler. F F; Açikgöz. E E; Berberoğlu. M M; Günöz. H H; Saka. N N; Calikoğlu. A S AS
Key Findings
- High‑dose sermorelin (60 µg/kg/day) produced height velocity comparable to daily growth hormone injections (0.1 IU/kg).
- Low‑dose sermorelin (30 µg/kg/day) resulted in slower growth.
- Only the growth hormone group showed a measurable increase in bone‑age‑adjusted height (height SDS).
- Sub‑cutaneous test doses of sermorelin did not sustain elevated GH levels, and accumulated GHRH did not correlate with GH output.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, sermorelin can modestly boost growth in GH‑deficient scenarios but offers no clear advantage over direct GH use, especially for bone development. The need for multiple daily injections and lack of sustained GH elevation limit its practicality for most adult biohackers seeking metabolic or performance benefits.
Summary
In a study of children with growth hormone deficiency, daily injections of the peptide sermorelin (GHRH‑1‑29‑NH2) at a high dose helped them grow at a rate similar to those given actual growth hormone, but it didn’t improve bone age like the hormone did. Lower doses were less effective, and the peptide didn’t keep raising growth hormone levels after a test dose.
Abstract
To assess the growth-promoting effect of different doses of growth hormone-releasing hormone(1-29)-NH2 (GHRH(1-29)-NH2) in GH deficiency (GHD) of hypothalamic origin, 43 prepubertal children aged between 4.3 and 18.9 years (mean 10.4 +/- 2.9 years) were randomly assigned to three treatment regimens: low-dose GHRH(1-29)-NH2 (LD group; n = 15), high-dose GHRH(1-29)-NH2 (HD group; n = 12) and GH (GH group; n = 16). The LD group received GHRH(1-29)-NH2 at 30 micrograms/kg/day s.c. in three daily doses, the HD group received 60 micrograms/kg/day s.c. in three daily doses and the GH group received GH, 0.1 IU/kg/day s.c. once daily. All children were treated for a period of 6 months. Evaluation included anthropometry, bone age, intravenous and subcutaneous GHRH(1-29)-NH2 tests and determination of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) levels. An increase in height velocity of 2 cm/year or more was observed in all except two children. Height velocity during treatment was lowest in the LD group, but comparable in the HD and GH groups. An increase in height SDS for bone age occurred only in the GH-treated group. GH responses to intravenous GHRH(1-29)-NH2 showed a priming effect of the LD GHRH(1-29)-NH2 treatment, while a decrease in response occurred in the GH-treated group. Following a subcutaneous test dose of one-third of the daily dose of GHRH(1-29)-NH2, GH levels remained unchanged in both the LD and HD groups. There was accumulation of GHRH immunoreactivity over time in the HD group, but there was no correlation between measured GHRH and GH levels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Study Information
pubmed
1993
1993-06-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1651-2227.1993.tb12828.x
14
44