Metabolism - Clinical and Experimental
Volume 44, Issue 12 , Pages 1577-1580, December 1995

Alcoholism abolishes the growth hormone response to sumatriptan administration in man

  • V. Coiro

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests to V. Coiro, MD, Istituto di Clinica Medica Generale e Terapia Medica, Via A. Gramsci 14-43100 Parma, Italy.
  • ,
  • P.P. Vescovi

Center for Alcohology of the Institute of Internal Medicine, University of Parma, Parma, Italy

Received 22 November 1994; accepted 28 March 1995.

Abstract 

To assess the possible influence of alcoholism on serotonergic control of growth hormone (GH) secretion, 6 mg of the 5-HT1D serotonergic receptor agonist, sumatriptan, was injected subcutaneously in a group of nine normal controls (aged 32 to 49 years) and in nine age-matched nondepressed male alcoholic subjects after 10 to 25 days of abstinence from alcohol. During the same period, subjects were also tested with GH-releasing hormone ([GHrh]1 μg/kg body weight in an intravenous [IV]bolus) and l-arginine, which releases GH from somatostatin inhibition (50 g in 50 mL normal saline over 30 minutes) to determine whether GH secretion in response to alternate secretagogues is preserved in alcoholics. A control test with administration of normal saline instead of drug treatments was also performed. Plasma GH levels were recorded over 2 hours in all tests. Administration of placebo did not change plasma GH levels in any subject. Similar GH responses were observed in normal controls and alcoholic subjects when GHRH or arginine were administered. A significant GH increase was observed in normal controls after sumatriptan injection; in contrast, GH secretion was not modified by sumatriptan administration in alcoholic patients. These data show that alcoholism is associated with an impairment in the serotonergic-stimulatory regulation of GH secretion, whereas GH responses to direct pituitary stimulation with GHRH or to release from somatostatinergic inhibition with arginine appear to be preserved in alcoholics.

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PII: 0026-0495(95)90078-0

Metabolism - Clinical and Experimental
Volume 44, Issue 12 , Pages 1577-1580, December 1995