Physiological studies show that total daily GH output begins to fall in our 30s largely because the bursts of GH released become smaller.
In longevity circles, that observation is often interpreted in a linear way: GH decreases with age, so perhaps the solution is to increase GH again.
Yet major endocrine reviews and guideline statements have not endorsed raising GH as an anti-aging approach in otherwise healthy adults. Trials in older adults without GH deficiency have produced modest improvements in body composition but also higher rates of adverse effects, and there is no GH-raising therapy approved specifically for anti-aging.
The reason is that GH is not a single dial that can be turned up.
GH output emerges from a regulatory network in the brain involving multiple interacting inputs:
growth hormone–releasing hormone (GHRH), which stimulates GH release
somatostatin, which suppresses GH release
ghrelin, which amplifies GH release
These inputs interact continuously with sleep depth, metabolic state, and reproductive hormones such as testosterone and estrogen.
So when GH changes across the lifespan, the more complete explanation lies in the upstream regulators.
In this article we will look at:
what growth hormone–releasing hormone (GHRH) is and how it stimulates GH production
the lesser-known role of GHRH as a sleep-promoting neuropeptide tied to deep sleep
what tends to change after midlife in the sleep–GHRH–GH axis
whether aging itself is the primary driver of those changes — or whether age is partly a proxy for modifiable factors
Let’s get started.