Growth hormone
49 sourcesRay Peat held a contrarian view on growth hormone (GH), considering chronically elevated levels to be problematic rather than beneficial. While mainstream anti-aging medicine often promotes GH supplementation, Peat argued that elevated GH is associated with increased cancer risk, insulin resistance, and accelerated aging. He pointed to research showing that GH-deficient animals and humans (such as Laron syndrome patients) tend to live longer and have lower cancer rates.
Peat saw elevated GH as a stress response — the body produces more GH when thyroid function is low, when blood sugar drops, or during fasting. He argued that optimizing thyroid function, maintaining stable blood sugar, and ensuring adequate nutrition would naturally keep GH at healthy levels without the need for supplementation.
Key Positions
- Considered chronically elevated growth hormone problematic, not beneficial
- GH-deficient organisms (Laron syndrome, dwarf mice) tend to live longer
- Elevated GH is associated with increased cancer risk and insulin resistance
- Viewed high GH as a stress marker — rises with low thyroid, low blood sugar, fasting
- Criticized anti-aging GH supplementation as potentially harmful
- Optimizing thyroid and blood sugar naturally regulates GH levels
- GH promotes cell proliferation, which can fuel tumor growth
Sources
49 items-
Politics & Science: Thyroid and Regeneration
Ray Peat interview/radio show on Thu Sep 11 2008 from Politics & Science -
Adaptive substance, creative regeneration: Mainstream science, repression, and creativity
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Aging, estrogen, and progesterone.
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Altitude and Mortality.
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BSE ("mad cow"), scrapie, etc.: Stimulated amyloid degeneration and the toxic fats.
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Breast Cancer.
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Diabetes, scleroderma, oils and hormones.
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Energy, structure, and carbon dioxide: A realistic view of the organism
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Estriol, DES, DDT, etc.
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Genes, Carbon Dioxide and Adaptation
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Glycemia, starch, and sugar in context
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Growth hormone: Hormone of Stress, Aging, and Death?
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I Choose Ice Cream - Geneviève
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Meat physiology, stress, and degenerative physiology
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Mitochondria and mortality
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Osteoporosis, aging, tissue renewal, and product science
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Progesterone, not estrogen, is the coronary protection factor of women.
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Prostate Cancer
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TSH, temperature, pulse rate, and other indicators in hypothyroidism
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The dark side of stress (learned helplesness)
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Thyroid, insomnia, and the insanities: Commonalities in disease
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Tissue-bound estrogen in aging
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VV Fitness Blog - Vahdaneh Vahid
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Water: swelling, tension, pain, fatigue, aging