Peptide Therapy Foundations: Secretagogues
A clinician's tour of the growth hormone secretagogues, from GHRH analogs to ghrelin-receptor agonists, covering mechanism, evidence.
Course Overview
What this course covers
This course examines the growth hormone secretagogues as a working class: the peptides and small molecules that prompt the pituitary to release growth hormone rather than supplying the hormone directly. It is built for clinicians who want to understand how each agent acts, where the evidence sits, and how the choices differ at the level of receptor, half-life, and signaling pattern.
The lessons fall into two broad families. The first is the GHRH analogs, including Sermorelin, Mod GRF 1-29, CJC-1295, and Tesamorelin, which engage the growth hormone releasing hormone receptor and tend to preserve the body’s pulsatile, feedback-controlled secretion. The second is the ghrelin and growth hormone secretagogue receptor agonists, including Ipamorelin, Hexarelin, GHRP-2, GHRP-6, MK-677, and Anamorelin, which act through a separate pathway and vary in selectivity, potency, and off-target signaling.
Each lesson is grounded in the same clinical lens: what the agent is, how it works, what the evidence shows, and what a practitioner weighs before applying it. Together they give you a comparative map of the class so you can reason about an individual peptide in the context of its alternatives.
What you'll explore
- Distinguish GHRH analogs from ghrelin-receptor agonists by mechanism and signaling pattern
- Compare individual secretagogues on receptor target, selectivity, and half-life
- Identify how each agent supports pulsatile growth hormone release
- Apply a consistent clinical framework when evaluating a secretagogue for use
William Seeds, MD
Before establishing the SSRP Institute, Dr. Seeds served as a board-certified orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine specialist for nearly three decades, including Chief of Surgery, Orthopedic Residency Site Director, and Director of The Ohio Bone & Joint Institute for University Hospitals.
His significant contributions to sports medicine have been recognized at the NFL Hall of Fame. He has consulted for athletes across all major sports leagues, including the NFL, NHL, MLB, NBA, and even the performers on “Dancing with the Stars.”
Through his research at the SSRP Institute, Dr. Seeds continues to explore the cellular pathways and mechanisms that positively impact disease and dysfunction in the body as well as optimize physical performance.