Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, Vol 54, Issue 8 M395-M399, Copyright © 1999 by The Gerontological Society of America
Oral arginine does not stimulate basal or augment exercise-induced GH secretion in either young or old adults
TJ Marcell, DR Taaffe, SA Hawkins, KM Tarpenning, G Pyka, L Kohlmeier, RA Wiswell and R Marcus
Department of Exercise Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA. [email protected]
BACKGROUND: Growth hormone (GH) helps maintain body composition and
metabolism in adults. However, basal and peak GH decline with age. Exercise
produces a physiologic GH response that is subnormal in elderly people.
Arginine (Arg) infusion can augment GH secretion, but the efficacy of oral
Arg to improve GH response to exercise has not been explored. We
investigated whether oral Arg increases GH secretion in young and old
people at rest and during exercise. METHODS: Twenty young (Y: 22.1 +/- 0.9
y; SEM) and 8 old (O: 68.5 +/- 2.1 y) male and female subjects underwent
three different trials following determination of their one-repetition
maximum strength (1-RM); exercise only (EO; 3 sets, 8-10 reps at 85% of
1-RM; on 12 separate resistive lifts), Arg only (5.0 g), or Arg + exercise.
Blood samples were collected between successive lifts, and GH (ng x ml(-1))
was determined via RIA. RESULTS: In Y vs O: Basal GH secreted (area under
the curve) was 543.6 +/- 84.0 vs 211.5 +/- 63.0. During EO, values were
986.6 +/- 156.6 and 517.8 +/- 85.5. Both were significantly lower in the
older individuals (p < .05). Oral Arg alone did not result in any
increase in GH secretion at rest (310.8 +/- 73.2 vs 262.9 +/- 141.2). When
Arg was coadministered during exercise, GH release was not affected in
either the young or old and appeared to be blunted in the young compared to
the exercise only trial in the young. CONCLUSION: Based upon these
findings, we concluded that oral Arg does not stimulate GH secretion and
may impair GH release during resistive exercise.