Cycling Peps?

When I experimented with Boremorelin, I cycled it. My understanding was that if it had been effective, the dosage would have been reduced over time. However, it didn't impact my IGF-1 levels at all.

I'm unfamiliar with GHRP-2.
 
Studies focusing on HIV patients revealed that Tesamorelin's (Egrifta) impact on reducing body fat and increasing lean muscle mass stabilized after about half a year. Tesamorelin is quite similar to Sermorelin.
 
I don't cycle GHRP-2. I'm currently maintaining a dose of 200 mcg, administered three times daily.

I often travel for my job, so I sometimes forget to bring my peps with me... like I did this week.
 
I was looking into Gonadorelin. I'm a total noob with this peptide... never used it before. Seems more available recently.

I decided it's not a replacement for HCG for me. Too many injections per day. But... could this be used for a quick boost? Like before a competition or something?
 
CalorieMom41 said:
But... could this be used for a quick boost? Like before a competition or something?

That's an interesting idea. I'd be concerned about potential side effects from such infrequent use. I'm also curious about Dihexa. I saw some stuff about it for cognitive enhancement. Has anyone tried it?
 
Regarding Dihexa, be very cautious. Some reports suggest it might affect c-MET expression, which can influence cancer cells. There aren't many validated studies on its long-term effects.
 
I attempted Semax and Selank, but they didn't do anything for me. Heard about them on some forum where people experiment with all sorts of things and can't give good reports, LOL.
 
GHRP-2 and CJC-1295 are typically cycled to prevent receptor desensitization - 8-12 weeks on with a 4-week break is the standard protocol. CJC-1295 DAC has a longer half-life which changes the timing. Most data supports cycling for GH secretagogues rather than continuous use.
 
GHRP-2 and CJC-1295 benefit from cycling - receptor desensitization is the main reason, typically 12-16 weeks on and 4-8 off. Indefinite use blunts the pulse amplitude over time.
 
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