NihilMaxxer
Spikes create stimulation.
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When you consume a very high glycemic load, blood glucose rises rapidly. The pancreas responds with a strong insulin surge. That insulin spike is the central driver of the IGF-1 modulation.
Insulin directly suppresses IGF-binding proteins, especially IGFBP-1. Since the majority of circulating IGF-1 is bound and biologically inactive, lowering these binding proteins shifts the balance toward a higher proportion of free, bioactive IGF-1. Free IGF-1 is what actually binds to IGF-1 receptors in bone, cartilage, and other tissues. So even without changing total IGF-1 dramatically, increasing the free fraction increases functional signaling.
Insulin also plays a permissive role in hepatic growth hormone signaling. Growth hormone pulses naturally throughout the day, and pulse amplitude is especially high during puberty. However the liver’s ability to convert GH signaling into IGF-1 production depends on intact insulin signaling. Insulin maintains growth hormone receptor expression and supports activation of the JAK2–STAT5 pathway, which drives IGF-1 gene transcription. In practical terms, insulin makes the liver more efficient at translating GH pulses into IGF-1 output.
With repeated high-glycemic exposure, you get repeated cycles of strong insulin elevation. Each cycle suppresses IGF-binding proteins and enhances hepatic GH responsiveness. Over time this increases the integrated daily exposure of tissues to bioactive IGF-1.
During puberty, this amplification becomes more pronounced because endogenous GH secretion is already elevated. Higher GH pulse amplitude combined with insulin mediated enhancement creates an endocrine environment biased toward increased IGF-1 bioavailability and receptor activation at growth plates.
The core idea is that insulin acts as a metabolic amplifier inside the GH–IGF axis. It increases the proportion of active IGF-1 in circulation and improves the liver’s responsiveness to growth hormone, thereby increasing effective IGF-1 signaling in peripheral tissues.
TLDR;
High glycemic sugar > big insulin surge.
Insulin lowers IGF-binding proteins and enhances GH signaling in the liver.
That increases free IGF-1 and improves conversion of GH into IGF-1 output.
Repeated daily spikes overtime increase overall IGF-1 signaling exposure, especially during puberty when GH is already high leading to enhanced bone growth during puberty.
Insulin directly suppresses IGF-binding proteins, especially IGFBP-1. Since the majority of circulating IGF-1 is bound and biologically inactive, lowering these binding proteins shifts the balance toward a higher proportion of free, bioactive IGF-1. Free IGF-1 is what actually binds to IGF-1 receptors in bone, cartilage, and other tissues. So even without changing total IGF-1 dramatically, increasing the free fraction increases functional signaling.
Insulin also plays a permissive role in hepatic growth hormone signaling. Growth hormone pulses naturally throughout the day, and pulse amplitude is especially high during puberty. However the liver’s ability to convert GH signaling into IGF-1 production depends on intact insulin signaling. Insulin maintains growth hormone receptor expression and supports activation of the JAK2–STAT5 pathway, which drives IGF-1 gene transcription. In practical terms, insulin makes the liver more efficient at translating GH pulses into IGF-1 output.
With repeated high-glycemic exposure, you get repeated cycles of strong insulin elevation. Each cycle suppresses IGF-binding proteins and enhances hepatic GH responsiveness. Over time this increases the integrated daily exposure of tissues to bioactive IGF-1.
During puberty, this amplification becomes more pronounced because endogenous GH secretion is already elevated. Higher GH pulse amplitude combined with insulin mediated enhancement creates an endocrine environment biased toward increased IGF-1 bioavailability and receptor activation at growth plates.
The core idea is that insulin acts as a metabolic amplifier inside the GH–IGF axis. It increases the proportion of active IGF-1 in circulation and improves the liver’s responsiveness to growth hormone, thereby increasing effective IGF-1 signaling in peripheral tissues.
TLDR;
High glycemic sugar > big insulin surge.
Insulin lowers IGF-binding proteins and enhances GH signaling in the liver.
That increases free IGF-1 and improves conversion of GH into IGF-1 output.
Repeated daily spikes overtime increase overall IGF-1 signaling exposure, especially during puberty when GH is already high leading to enhanced bone growth during puberty.