Sermorelin acetate has been shown to help regulate orexin signaling. Orexin is a potent regulator of sleep that is produced in specialized neurons within the central nervous system. Research in fish shows that Sermorelin augments orexin secretion. Sleep dysregulation is a common problem associated with age, but orexin dysregulation affects more than just sleep patterns. Orexin, and by extension sleep pattern, has profound effects on feeding behavior, addiction, lipid metabolism, mood, concentration, and more.
We tend to think of sleep as a time of inactivity, but it is better to think of sleep, which consumes fully one third of the average life, as a time of altered activity. In fact, sleep reduces conscious activity so that energy can be shunted to other pathways involved in tissue repair and organ system maintenance. In wasn’t until recently, in fact, that science recognized an entirely new system within the brain (the glymphatic system) that is only really active when we are asleep and is necessary for removing metabolic byproducts and toxins from the central nervous system.
Sleep is a necessary component of health and has been connected, in dozens if not hundreds of studies, to increased longevity. Research shows that optimal sleep benefits the cardiovascular, endocrine, immune, and nervous systems. Sermorelin, by improving sleep efficiency, can actually slow the effects of aging by helping to repair and maintain all of the systems mentioned.