Quick Comparison

CJC-1295 (no DAC)IGF-DES
Half-Life0.5 hours20-30 minutes
Typical DosageStandard: 100-300 mcg subcutaneous once to three times daily, typically before bed and/or upon waking. Often combined with Ipamorelin 200-300 mcg in the same injection. Cycled 5 days on, 2 days off, or continuously for 8-12 weeks.Standard: 50-100 mcg intramuscular injected directly into target muscles pre- or post-workout. Short half-life necessitates site-specific injection for localized effects. Timing must be precise relative to training.
AdministrationSubcutaneous injectionIntramuscular injection (site-specific)
Research Papers0 papers60 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

CJC-1295 (no DAC)

CJC-1295 (no DAC), also known as Mod GRF 1-29, is a synthetic analogue of the first 29 amino acids of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH). Four amino acid substitutions (at positions 2, 8, 15, and 27) have been made to increase resistance to enzymatic degradation while preserving full biological activity at the GHRH receptor (GHRH-R), a G protein-coupled receptor expressed on somatotroph cells in the anterior pituitary.

When CJC-1295 binds the GHRH receptor, it activates the Gs alpha subunit, which stimulates adenylyl cyclase to produce cyclic AMP (cAMP). Rising cAMP levels activate protein kinase A (PKA), which phosphorylates CREB (cAMP response element-binding protein) and other transcription factors that drive GH gene expression and secretion. Importantly, this mechanism preserves the natural pulsatile pattern of GH release because it works within the existing hypothalamic-pituitary feedback loop — somatostatin still provides inhibitory regulation between pulses.

The key advantage of the no-DAC version over the DAC version is this preservation of pulsatility. Because its half-life is approximately 30 minutes, it produces a discrete GH pulse that rises and falls naturally, mimicking the body's own secretory pattern. This pulsatile pattern is believed to be physiologically superior to sustained elevation because GH receptor sensitivity is maintained between pulses, and the liver's IGF-1 production response is optimized by intermittent rather than continuous GH stimulation. This is why CJC-1295 (no DAC) is often preferred by practitioners despite requiring more frequent dosing.

IGF-DES

IGF-DES (Des(1-3) IGF-1) is a naturally occurring truncated form of IGF-1, missing the first three N-terminal amino acids (glycine, proline, glutamic acid). This truncation occurs naturally in brain tissue and is the predominant form of IGF-1 found in the central nervous system. The missing tripeptide is critical for IGFBP binding, so Des(1-3) IGF-1 has approximately 10-fold reduced affinity for IGF binding proteins while retaining full binding affinity for the IGF-1 receptor.

The IGF-1R activation mechanism is identical to native IGF-1: receptor tyrosine kinase autophosphorylation, IRS recruitment, and downstream activation of PI3K/Akt/mTOR (protein synthesis, anti-apoptosis) and Ras/MAPK/ERK (proliferation, differentiation) cascades. The critical difference is pharmacokinetic — with a half-life of only 20-30 minutes, IGF-DES acts as a highly concentrated, short-duration burst of IGF-1R signaling localized to the injection site.

This pharmacokinetic profile makes IGF-DES uniquely suited for site-specific muscle enhancement when injected directly into target muscles immediately before or after training. The rapid clearance means the intense anabolic signal is confined to the local tissue environment, minimizing systemic effects such as hypoglycemia and organ growth. Locally, the brief but potent IGF-1R activation stimulates satellite cell activation, proliferation, and differentiation, potentially promoting localized hyperplasia. The trade-off is practical: the extremely short window of activity requires precise timing of injection relative to training, and any systemic benefits are negligible due to rapid degradation.

Risks & Safety

CJC-1295 (no DAC)

Common

facial flushing, headache, dizziness, injection site irritation.

Serious

overworking the pituitary gland with excessive doses, theoretical risk of promoting existing tumours through elevated growth hormone.

Rare

allergic reactions, fainting.

IGF-DES

Common

injection site pain and swelling, temporary low blood sugar, localized tissue growth.

Serious

uneven or lopsided muscle development from repeated injections in the same spots, low blood sugar requiring immediate sugar intake.

Rare

scar tissue build-up at repeated injection sites, allergic reactions. Very limited human safety data.

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