What Influences Resting GH?
At rest, GH secretion is characterized by episodic bursts over a 24-hour period and is influenced by age, gender, nutrition, sleep, body composition, regional distribution of bodyfat, stress, fitness level, sex hormones (testosterone and estrogen), insulin, and IGF-1 levels. Of the factors listed above that influence GH secretion, if you had to choose the two most important predictors of your 24-hour GH release which would they be? Researchers examined the 10 physiological factors regulating GH secretion at rest during men and found that the 2 physiological factors that had the greatest impact on resting GH secretion are: abdominal visceral fat and fasting insulin levels. In the study, abdominal fat was the strongest predictor of 24-hr GH release among the ten variables studied, followed closely by fasting insulin levels. An inverse relationship between abdominal fat and 24-h GH release (the bigger your stomach, the lower GH secretion you have) was demonstrated in both the young and old men. It's interesting that although with age there is a reduction in GH secretion, however having a big gut suppresses GH greater than the aging process. Having a big gut not only suppresses GH secretion but also serum IGF-I concentrations which is a powerful muscle builder 22, 23, 24. It seems that adhering to diets that are low in carbs or are low glycemic would result in greater insulin control which would enhance the actions of GH.
Excess Fat Blunts the GH Response to Exercise
Some researchers have found that obese individuals have lower resting GH and higher cortisol levels than normal weight subjects, additionally obese subjects have a blunted GH response to exercise compared to normal subjects26, 27. What better excuse to lose the gut than to realize that with increased weight gain there is a lowered GH response not only at rest but also in response to exercise. In the J. Clin. Endocrinology and Metabolism it was reported that not only do obese men have a blunted GH response to exercise but also have a blunted respiratory quotient (RQ) (RQ is a measure of fat oxidation), increased cortisol production, and a smaller post-exercise rate of metabolism compared to lean individuals28. In contrast to obese men, lean individuals demonstrated significant increase in GH during exercise and a clear shift toward an enhanced fat utilization after intense exercise accompanied by a 28% higher rate of oxygen consumption post exercise (higher metabolic rate). Getting too fat in the offseason makes it all the harder to get back in competition shape.
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The Lactic Acid Myth.
For many years researchers have long thought that lactic acid is a stimulator of GH secretion. In Dr. Colker’s section of Extreme Muscle Enhancement last month there was an excellent article on tourniquet training, he mentioned how lactic acid is not a stimulator of GH. He mentions the tourniquet training study in which they investigated the effect of partial vascular occlusion versus no occlusion with resistance exercise. Lactate increased in both trials but there was not significantly different from each other at any time point; however GH increased by fourfold from pre- to postexercise in the vascular occlusion session but did not change significantly during the resistance exercise session. Lactate was the same in both trials yet GH increased 4-fold in the vascular occlusion trial. Upon further research, here are some other studies to back that GH is not stimulated by GH. Artificial manipulation of blood lactate levels using sodium lactate infusions (lactic acid) have been shown to have no consistent effect on GH concentration24, 25. High intensity exercise does stimulate GH however lactic acid is not the major stimulus. Instead, it is possible that a mechanism that stimulates anaerobic metabolism might result in an increase in blood lactate concentrations whilst also providing another signal for GH release.
Key Points
* Acute increases in GH that occur during exercise lead to increases in post-exercise fat utilization.
* Interval training leads to greater fat loss than aerobic exercise
* GH has synergistic actions with catecholamines.
* Lactic acid is not a stimulator of GH; infusions of lactate do not raise GH concentrations.
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