AdamaxvsSemaglutide
Side-by-side comparison across mechanism, dosage, evidence, side effects, administration, and stack synergies. Citations on every claim where available.
01Mechanism of Action
02Dosage Protocols
04Side Effects & Safety
- ·Pregnancy and lactation (precautionary; no data)
- ·Active cardiovascular instability (due to potential pressor effects)
- ·Personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma
- ·Multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2
- ·Pregnancy / breastfeeding
- ·Hypersensitivity to semaglutide
- ·Hypertension (monitor BP if using higher doses)
- ·Renal impairment (natriuretic effects may alter electrolyte balance)
- ·Severe gastroparesis
- ·History of pancreatitis
- ·Diabetic retinopathy (may worsen with rapid glycemic improvement)
05Administration Protocol
06Stack Synergy
Both Adamax and Semax are ACTH(4-10)-derived nootropics acting via melanocortin receptors and BDNF upregulation. Adamax has distinct amino acid modifications at positions 8-10, potentially offering complementary receptor binding profiles or metabolic stability. Stacking may amplify neurotrophic signaling and cognitive enhancement, though direct synergy studies are absent. Theoretical multi-pathway benefit.
- Adamax
- Research dose intranasal
- Semax
- 300–600 mcg intranasal
- Frequency
- Once daily, morning or pre-cognitive task
- Primary benefit
- Enhanced BDNF upregulation, cognitive performance, neuroprotection
Combining two GLP-1 RA-class drugs is not clinically validated and risks additive GI toxicity. Tirzepatide's GIP component already provides complementary mechanism vs pure GLP-1; stacking with semaglutide adds receptor saturation but no synergy. NOT recommended.
- Note
- Stack not recommended — choose one GLP-1 RA
- Primary benefit
- (none — additive toxicity, no synergy)