Effects of a growth hormone-releasing hormone analog on endogenous GH pulsatility and insulin sensitivity in healthy men.
Stanley. Takara L TL; Chen. Cindy Y CY; Branch. Karen L KL; Makimura. Hideo H; Grinspoon. Steven K SK
Key Findings
- Tesamorelin increased mean overnight GH by about 0.5âŻÂ”g/L and boosted GH pulse area and basal secretion.
- IGFâ1 rose sharply (â+180âŻÂ”g/L) after just two weeks of treatment.
- Fasting glucose and insulinâstimulated glucose uptake (a measure of insulin sensitivity) were not significantly altered.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers aiming to elevate GH for bodyâcomposition or performance gains, a shortâterm (â2âŻweeks) daily dose of 2âŻmg tesamorelin appears effective and does not acutely impair insulin sensitivity. However, the data come from a tiny, healthy male cohort, so longerâterm safety, optimal dosing, and effects in women or older adults remain unknown. Use with medical supervision and monitor glucose markers if you decide to experiment.
Summary
A twoâweek daily injection of tesamorelin (2âŻmg under the skin) in middleâaged healthy men boosted both the overall amount and the pulseâlike bursts of growth hormone overnight, and raised IGFâ1 levels, while leaving the bodyâs ability to take up glucose unchanged. This suggests you can raise GH shortâterm without immediately harming insulin sensitivity.
Abstract
Strategies to augment pulsatile GH may be beneficial in patients with excess visceral adiposity, in whom GH secretion is reduced. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a novel GHRH (GHRH(1-44)) analog, tesamorelin, on endogenous GH pulsatility and insulin sensitivity in healthy men. Thirteen males (mean age 45 ± 3 yr and body mass index 27.3 ± 1.2 kg/m(2)) received tesamorelin 2 mg sc once daily for 2 wk, with assessment made at baseline, after 2 wk of treatment, and after 2 wk of withdrawal. The primary end point was change in mean overnight GH as determined by overnight frequent sampling. Secondary end points included insulin-stimulated glucose uptake as measured by euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp; IGF-I; and GH secretion parameters, including pulse area, pulse frequency, and basal secretion. Tesamorelin treatment increased mean overnight GH (change +0.5 ± 0.1 μg/liter, P = 0.004), average log(10) GH peak area (change +0.4 ± 0.1 log(10) μg/liter, P = 0.001), and basal GH secretion (change +0.008 ± 0.003 μg/liter · min, P = 0.008). IGF-I increased by 181 ± 22 μg/liter (P < 0.0001). Neither fasting glucose (P = 0.93) nor insulin-stimulated glucose uptake (P = 0.61) was significantly affected by tesamorelin. Once-daily short-term treatment with a GHRH(1-44) analog, tesamorelin, augments basal and pulsatile GH secretion. Moreover, although tesamorelin significantly increases IGF-I, peripheral insulin-stimulated glucose uptake appears to be preserved.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-10-13T00:00:00.000Z
10.1210/jc.2010-1587
49
43