GH secretion declines by 14%/decade of adult life, leading to the suggestion that people over the age of 60 years are functionally GH deficient. Recently, rivastigmine, a novel cerebral selective cholinesterase-inhibitor (ChEI), was shown to be a powerful drug to enhance GH release to repeated GHRH stimulation in healthy elderly human subjects. The present study was designed as a randomised controlled trial to evaluate long term effects of donepezil, a cerebral selective ChEI, on basal GH and IGF-1 levels and on GH response to GHRH (1 microg/kg i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The growth hormone (GH) secretion declines by 14% with each decade of adult life. Several attempts have been made to reverse the manifestations of the senile GH deficiency, termed somatopause, but GH substitution treatment in old age has not yet developed an established regimen. Cholinesterase inhibitors like pyridostigmine are able to elicit GH secretion when administered alone and to enhance the GH response to growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH), but its clinical use is limited due to the strong peripheral cholinergic side effects.
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