Abstract
GH secretion declines with aging. The neuroendocrine mechanisms of somatopause are uncertain. To semiquantify endogenous hypothalamic GHRH output, we measured the suppressibility of spontaneous and GHRH-stimulated GH secretion by graded doses of a specific competitive GHRH receptor antagonist (N-Ac-Tyr1,D-Arg2)GHRH-(1-29) in healthy young and elderly men. Nocturnal GH was about 30% lower in the elderly than in the young. Graded boluses of GHRH elicited dose-dependent GH responses, with no difference between the two age groups. Graded infusions of GHRH antagonist suppressed GH responses to GHRH in a dose-dependent manner, but with similar potency in both groups. The degree of inhibition depended on the magnitude of GHRH bolus: the dose-inhibition curves for the low GHRH boluses were shifted to the left compared to those with the high GHRH bolus (P = 0.01). Similarly, the dose-inhibition curve for spontaneous GH secretion was shifted to the left for the elderly compared to the young men (P = 0.01). Thus, the model of graded infusions of GHRH antagonist differentiates between different amounts of GHRH presented to the pituitary, permitting semiquantification of the endogenous hypothalamic GHRH output in vivo. Our data suggest that there is an age-dependent decrease in the endogenous hypothalamic GHRH output contributing to the age-associated GH decline.
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