Quick Comparison

EnclomipheneHGH 191AA
Half-Life10 hours2-3 hours
Typical DosageStandard: 12.5-25 mg oral once daily. Some protocols use up to 50 mg. Often used as monotherapy for secondary hypogonadism or alongside GH peptides. Continuous use or cycled depending on protocol and lab monitoring.Clinical (GH deficiency): 0.2-0.6 mg subcutaneous once daily. Anti-aging: 1-2 IU subcutaneous once daily, typically before bed. Bodybuilding: 2-4 IU subcutaneous once daily (up to 6-8 IU in advanced protocols). All doses injected subcutaneously, preferably in the evening to coincide with natural GH pulse timing.
AdministrationOralSubcutaneous or intramuscular injection (daily)
Research Papers1 papers0 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Enclomiphene

Enclomiphene is the trans-stereoisomer of clomiphene citrate, a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM). Clomiphene (Clomid) contains a roughly equal mixture of two geometric isomers: enclomiphene (trans) and zuclomiphene (cis). Enclomiphene is the pharmacologically desired isomer for testosterone elevation because it acts as a pure estrogen receptor antagonist in the hypothalamus and pituitary, while zuclomiphene has mixed agonist/antagonist activity that can cause unwanted estrogenic effects and has a much longer half-life (weeks), accumulating with chronic dosing.

Enclomiphene competitively binds to estrogen receptors (ERα) in the hypothalamus and anterior pituitary gland, blocking the binding of circulating estradiol. Normally, estradiol exerts negative feedback on the hypothalamic-pituitary axis: estradiol binding to ERα in the hypothalamus reduces GnRH pulse frequency and amplitude, while estradiol binding in the pituitary reduces gonadotroph sensitivity to GnRH. By blocking these receptors, enclomiphene removes the negative feedback signal — the hypothalamus 'perceives' low estrogen levels regardless of actual estradiol concentrations and responds by increasing GnRH pulse frequency. The pituitary, also freed from estrogen-mediated suppression, responds more robustly to each GnRH pulse, producing increased LH and FSH secretion.

Elevated LH stimulates Leydig cells in the testes to produce more testosterone (via the LHCGR/cAMP/StAR steroidogenic pathway), while elevated FSH stimulates Sertoli cells to support spermatogenesis. This is the critical advantage of enclomiphene over exogenous testosterone replacement: it raises endogenous testosterone production through the natural HPG axis while preserving (and potentially enhancing) fertility. Exogenous testosterone, by contrast, suppresses LH/FSH through negative feedback, causing testicular atrophy and often azoospermia. The 10-hour half-life of enclomiphene allows once-daily dosing, and its pure antagonist profile at ERα avoids the estrogenic side effects (hot flashes, visual disturbances, mood changes) that zuclomiphene contributes in mixed clomiphene formulations.

HGH 191AA

Human Growth Hormone is a 191-amino-acid single-chain polypeptide secreted by somatotroph cells of the anterior pituitary gland. It exerts its effects through two distinct pathways: direct action via GH receptors and indirect action through insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). When HGH binds to the GH receptor (a type I cytokine receptor), it induces receptor dimerization and activates the JAK2/STAT5 signaling cascade, which directly stimulates gene transcription for protein synthesis, cell proliferation, and lipolysis.

The indirect pathway is equally important. GH receptor activation in hepatocytes stimulates the production and secretion of IGF-1, a 70-amino-acid peptide that circulates bound to IGF binding proteins (primarily IGFBP-3 and the acid-labile subunit). Circulating IGF-1 acts on virtually every tissue in the body — promoting amino acid uptake and protein synthesis in skeletal muscle, stimulating chondrocyte proliferation in growth plates, enhancing osteoblast activity for bone formation, and supporting neuronal survival and myelination.

GH also has profound effects on metabolism independent of IGF-1. It directly stimulates lipolysis in adipocytes by activating hormone-sensitive lipase, mobilizing stored fat as free fatty acids for energy. It antagonizes insulin action in peripheral tissues (hence the diabetogenic risk), shifting the body's fuel preference from glucose to fatty acids. In muscle, GH promotes nitrogen retention and positive protein balance. The pulsatile pattern of natural GH secretion — with the largest pulse during deep sleep — is important for its physiological effects, which is why exogenous GH protocols often try to mimic this pattern.

Risks & Safety

Enclomiphene

Common

headache, nausea, hot flashes, mild mood changes.

Serious

visual disturbances (blurred vision, seeing flashes of light — less common than with mixed clomiphene), potential overstimulation of testosterone production.

Rare

blood clots (SERM class effect), significant mood changes, visual blind spots. Significantly fewer estrogenic side effects than clomiphene (Clomid) due to absence of zuclomiphene.

HGH 191AA

Common

joint pain, wrist pain/numbness (carpal tunnel), water retention and swelling, headache, tingling in hands/feet.

Serious

can make your body less responsive to insulin (raising blood sugar), may accelerate growth of existing tumours, enlarged jaw/hands/feet with long-term overuse.

Rare

increased pressure in the skull, breast tissue growth in men, underactive thyroid. Not suitable for people with active cancer or severe illness.

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