Merimee T J, Pulkkinen A J, Burton C E
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1976 May;42(5):931-7. doi: 10.1210/jcem-42-5-931.
Studies were designed to determine whether variations in diet composition could modify the secretion of human growth hormone. Eight men and seven women ingested experimental diets for 10-12 days. Each experimental diet was preceded by a control diet for five days. Experimental diets studied in men were a) 2300 calorie, 80% carbohydrate (8 men); b) 2300 calorie, 75% high-fat (7 men); c) 2300 calorie, 70% high-protein (5 men); d) 3600 calorie, "control" (40% carbohydrate, 40% fat, 20% protein) (5 men); and e) 3600 calorie, 80% high-carbohydrate (5 men). A control diet and a high-carbohydrate (5 men). A control diet and a high-carbohydrate diet at the 2300 calorie level were studied in women. Each diet study was terminated by a 72 hour fast. Serum samples were collected hourly for 24 hours after each control period, on the eigth, ninth, or tenth day of each study, and during the final day of each fast. High-carbohydrate diets at the 2300 calorie level caused a significant decrease of growth hormone values in serum in each of eight men (sign test of significance, P less than .01). The mean figures were likewise significantly decreased. Isocaloric diets of high fat and high protein did not alter growth hormone concentrations in serum. A high-caloric diet similar to the control diet in composition was without effect on growth hormone secretion in men; however, a high-carbohydrate diet at the higher caloric level again depressed growth hormone values in plasma. On the third day of a 72 hour fast, growth hormone values in serum increased 287% in men, from a mean control serum concentration of 4.4 +/- 0.8 ng/ml to 11.9 +/- 5.0 ng/ml (P less than .01). Women, unlike men, had no significant decrease in growth hormone concentrations in serum over a 24 hour period after the high-carbohydrate diet, and the increase after starvation was significantly less than that in men, achieving significance only when evaluated by paired analysis. Growth hormone values in serum after the infusion of arginine followed a similar pattern, i.e., decreased after high carbohydrate but unaffected by other diets in men; high carbohydrate diets did not alter the growth hormone response of women to arginine.
研究旨在确定饮食成分的变化是否会改变人类生长激素的分泌。8名男性和7名女性摄入实验性饮食10 - 12天。每种实验性饮食之前都有5天的对照饮食。男性所研究的实验性饮食包括:a)2300卡路里,80%碳水化合物(8名男性);b)2300卡路里,75%高脂肪(7名男性);c)2300卡路里,70%高蛋白(5名男性);d)3600卡路里,“对照”(40%碳水化合物,40%脂肪,20%蛋白质)(5名男性);以及e)3600卡路里,80%高碳水化合物(5名男性)。女性研究了对照饮食和2300卡路里水平的高碳水化合物饮食(5名女性)。每项饮食研究均以72小时禁食结束。在每个对照期后、每项研究的第八、九或十天以及每次禁食的最后一天,每小时采集血清样本24小时。2300卡路里水平的高碳水化合物饮食导致8名男性中每一位的血清生长激素值显著下降(显著性符号检验,P小于0.01)。平均数值同样显著下降。高脂肪和高蛋白的等热量饮食并未改变血清中的生长激素浓度。一种成分与对照饮食相似的高热量饮食对男性的生长激素分泌没有影响;然而,更高热量水平的高碳水化合物饮食再次使血浆中的生长激素值降低。在72小时禁食的第三天,男性血清中的生长激素值从平均对照血清浓度4.4±0.8纳克/毫升增加到11.9±5.0纳克/毫升,增长了287%(P小于0.01)。与男性不同,女性在高碳水化合物饮食后的24小时内血清生长激素浓度没有显著下降,饥饿后的增加显著低于男性,仅在配对分析评估时才具有显著性。输注精氨酸后血清中的生长激素值遵循类似模式,即男性在高碳水化合物后下降,但不受其他饮食影响;高碳水化合物饮食并未改变女性对精氨酸的生长激素反应。