Quick Comparison

AOD-9604L-Carnitine
Half-Life1-2 hours2-3 hours (injectable); oral bioavailability 15-25%
Typical DosageResearch: 300 mcg subcutaneous once daily in the abdominal area, on an empty stomach. Often cycled 12 weeks on, 4 weeks off.Oral: 500-2000 mg once or twice daily. Injectable: 500-1000 mg intramuscular two or three times weekly. Clinical (Carnitor): 50-100 mg/kg/day oral for primary carnitine deficiency. Best combined with exercise for fat loss benefits.
AdministrationSubcutaneous injection or oralOral (capsule, liquid) or intramuscular injection
Research Papers1 papers30 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

AOD-9604

AOD-9604 is a modified fragment of human growth hormone comprising amino acids 176-191 with an additional tyrosine residue at the N-terminus. This specific region of the GH molecule contains the lipolytic (fat-burning) domain while lacking the receptor binding regions responsible for growth-promoting and diabetogenic effects. The result is a peptide that mimics the fat metabolism effects of growth hormone without stimulating IGF-1 production, bone growth, or insulin resistance.

The primary mechanism involves stimulation of beta-3 adrenergic receptors on adipocytes, which activates hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) through a cAMP-dependent pathway. HSL catalyzes the hydrolysis of stored triglycerides into free fatty acids and glycerol, which are then released into the bloodstream for oxidation by muscle and liver tissue. Simultaneously, AOD-9604 appears to inhibit lipogenesis — the synthesis of new fatty acids from non-lipid precursors — by downregulating acetyl-CoA carboxylase and fatty acid synthase activity in adipocytes.

Unlike full-length growth hormone, AOD-9604 does not bind to the GH receptor or stimulate JAK2/STAT5 signaling, which is why it avoids the IGF-1 elevation, water retention, and insulin resistance associated with exogenous GH use. However, it should be noted that AOD-9604 failed to show significant weight loss compared to placebo in Phase II/III clinical trials, raising questions about whether its in vitro lipolytic activity translates to meaningful clinical effects at the doses tested.

L-Carnitine

L-Carnitine plays an indispensable role in cellular energy metabolism as the sole carrier molecule for transporting long-chain fatty acids (14+ carbons) across the inner mitochondrial membrane, which is otherwise impermeable to them. This transport system, known as the carnitine shuttle, is the rate-limiting step for fatty acid beta-oxidation — without carnitine, long-chain fats simply cannot be burned for energy.

The shuttle operates through a three-enzyme system. First, carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT-I), located on the outer mitochondrial membrane, conjugates carnitine to a fatty acyl-CoA molecule, forming acylcarnitine. This acylcarnitine crosses the inner membrane via the carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase (CACT). Inside the mitochondrial matrix, carnitine palmitoyltransferase II (CPT-II) releases the fatty acid (as acyl-CoA) for beta-oxidation while regenerating free carnitine, which shuttles back out. Each cycle of beta-oxidation cleaves two carbons from the fatty acid chain, producing acetyl-CoA (which enters the citric acid cycle), FADH2, and NADH — generating substantial ATP.

Beyond fat transport, L-carnitine serves additional metabolic functions. It buffers the acyl-CoA/CoA ratio in cells, preventing toxic accumulation of acyl-CoA intermediates. It supports branched-chain amino acid metabolism and may improve mitochondrial function in aging tissues. In people with genuine carnitine deficiency (genetic or dialysis-related), supplementation produces dramatic improvements in energy and fat metabolism. However, in individuals with normal carnitine levels, supplementation has shown more modest effects, as the carnitine shuttle is rarely the limiting factor when carnitine is already adequate.

Risks & Safety

AOD-9604

Common

injection site irritation, headache, mild tiredness.

Serious

chest tightness (reported in trials), very limited clinical data on long-term effects.

Rare

allergic reactions.

L-Carnitine

Common

nausea, diarrhea, stomach cramps, fishy body odour at high oral doses.

Serious

chronic high-dose oral use may produce TMAO, a compound linked to heart disease risk.

Rare

seizures in people with pre-existing seizure disorders.

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