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RESEARCH PRODUCT

GH responses to two consecutive bouts of neuromuscular electrical stimulation in healthy adults.

Nicoletta MarazziNicola A. MaffiulettiMarc JubeauA. De ColFiorenza AgostiClaudio L. LafortunaAlessandro Sartorio

subject

AdultFeedback PhysiologicalMalemedicine.medical_specialtyHydrocortisonebusiness.industryHuman Growth HormoneEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismArea under the curveStimulationGeneral MedicineStimulus (physiology)Growth Hormone-Releasing HormoneElectric StimulationQuadriceps MuscleEndocrinologyEndocrinologyInternal medicinemedicineHumansLactic AcidMuscle StrengthbusinessExercise

description

BackgroundIt is well established that repeated GHRH administration or repeated voluntary exercise bouts are associated with a complete blunting of GH responsiveness when the administration of the second stimulus follows the first one after a 2-h interval.AimTo evaluate GH responses to neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) in healthy adults.MethodsSix volunteers (mean age±s.d. 31.7±5.5 years) were studied before and after two consecutive bouts of NMES exercise (a series of 20 contractions at the maximum of individual tolerance, frequency: 75 Hz, pulse duration: 400 μs, on–off ratio: 6.25–20 s) administered at a 2-h interval.ResultsBaseline GH levels (mean: 0.3±0.2 ng/ml) significantly increased after the first NMES (peak: 4.2±3.7 ng/ml), with a complete normalization after 120 min (0.3±0.3 ng/ml). The administration of the second bout of NMES of comparable characteristics also resulted in a significant GH increase (peak: 5.2±3.2 ng/ml), which was comparable with that observed after the previous one. GH net incremental area under the curve after the first and second bouts of NMES were not significantly different (155.1±148.5 and 176.9±123.3 ng/ml per h, P=0.785).ConclusionsUnlike repeated pharmacological stimuli and voluntary exercise bouts, subsequent sessions of NMES administered at a 2-h interval appear to circumvent feedback mechanisms and to re-induce the GH responses, thus indicating a possible different underlying mechanism elicited by different GH-releasing stimuli.

10.1530/eje-07-0775https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18299463