GonadorelinvsMGF
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
03Metabolic / Fat Loss Evidence
04Side Effects & Safety
- ·Pregnancy (except therapeutic infertility protocols)
- ·Hypersensitivity to gonadorelin or excipients
- ·Hormone-dependent tumors (prostate, breast) — risk of tumor stimulation via sex hormone elevation
- ·Active malignancy or history of IGF-1-sensitive cancers (prostate, colorectal, breast, osteosarcoma)
- ·No established therapeutic use — investigational only
- ·Ovarian cysts or PCOS (monitor for OHSS)
- ·Pituitary adenoma or other sellar mass (may worsen with gonadotropin surge)
- ·Family history of IGF-1-axis malignancies
- ·Use outside research setting
05Administration Protocol
06Stack Synergy
In hypogonadotropic hypogonadism protocols, gonadorelin restores pituitary LH/FSH pulsatility, while exogenous hCG directly stimulates Leydig cells (acting as LH mimetic) to maintain testosterone production. This dual approach ensures both central axis restoration and immediate gonadal steroidogenesis, preventing testicular atrophy during fertility treatment. hCG's longer half-life (24–36 hrs) complements gonadorelin's pulsatile short-acting profile.
- Gonadorelin
- 5–10 mcg IV every 120 min (pulsatile pump)
- hCG
- 1500–2000 IU SQ · 2–3× per week
- Duration
- 12–24 weeks for spermatogenesis induction
- Primary benefit
- Fertility restoration in hypothalamic hypogonadism with maintained testicular function
MGF activates satellite cells for muscle fiber repair; BPC-157 promotes angiogenesis, collagen synthesis, and tendon healing via distinct pathways (VEGF, FAK, integrin signaling). Theoretical synergy in post-injury contexts combines myogenic (MGF) and stromal (BPC-157) repair mechanisms. Both lack human validation.
- MGF
- No established dose
- BPC-157
- 250–500 mcg SQ near injury site
- Context
- Animal models only
- Primary benefit
- Theoretical multi-tissue repair (muscle + tendon/ligament)
TB-500 (thymosin beta-4 fragment) enhances actin polymerization, cell migration, and angiogenesis—complementary to MGF satellite cell activation. Both upregulated post-injury; combined use presumed additive for muscle regeneration in preclinical models.
- MGF
- No established dose
- TB-500
- 2–5 mg SQ weekly
- Context
- Animal models only
- Primary benefit
- Satellite cell activation + enhanced migration/angiogenesis