Quick Comparison
| Enclomiphene | TB-500 | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 10 hours | 2-3 hours |
| Typical Dosage | Standard: 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. | Loading: 2-5 mg subcutaneous twice weekly for 4-6 weeks. Maintenance: 2-5 mg subcutaneous every 2 weeks. Some protocols use daily dosing during acute injury phase. |
| Administration | Oral | Subcutaneous or intramuscular injection |
| Research Papers | 1 papers | 2 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.
TB-500
TB-500 is the active fragment of Thymosin Beta-4 (Tβ4), a 43-amino-acid peptide present in virtually every nucleated cell in the body. Its central molecular function is the sequestration of G-actin monomers — the globular, unpolymerized form of actin. By binding G-actin at a 1:1 ratio, TB-500 maintains a reservoir of monomeric actin that can be rapidly mobilized for polymerization into F-actin filaments when cells need to migrate, change shape, or form new structures during tissue repair.
This actin-regulating role is fundamental to TB-500's healing effects. When tissue is damaged, cells at the wound margin must migrate into the injury site. Cell migration requires dynamic actin polymerization at the leading edge of the cell (forming lamellipodia and filopodia) and depolymerization at the trailing edge. TB-500 facilitates this process by providing a controlled supply of G-actin monomers. It promotes migration of keratinocytes (for skin wound closure), endothelial cells (for new blood vessel formation), and cardiac progenitor cells (for heart repair).
Beyond actin regulation, TB-500 has significant anti-inflammatory and gene-regulatory effects. It downregulates pro-inflammatory cytokines including IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α while upregulating anti-inflammatory mediators. It activates cell survival pathways, specifically Akt-mediated anti-apoptotic signaling, protecting damaged cells from programmed cell death. TB-500 also promotes angiogenesis by stimulating endothelial progenitor cell differentiation and new capillary formation. In cardiac tissue, it has demonstrated the ability to activate epicardial progenitor cells and promote cardiomyocyte survival following ischemic injury. The combination of cell migration, anti-inflammation, angiogenesis, and cell survival makes TB-500 one of the most broad-spectrum healing peptides available.
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.
TB-500
Common
headaches, nausea, fatigue, injection site irritation, temporary lightheadedness.
Serious
may promote growth of existing cancerous cells by stimulating cell movement and new blood vessel growth; theoretical risk of speeding up undetected tumors.
Rare
allergic reactions, localized infection.
Full Profiles
Enclomiphene →
A medication that boosts natural testosterone production by blocking estrogen's feedback signal in the brain. Used in men's health clinics as an alternative to testosterone shots that preserves fertility and testicular function. Unlike mixed clomiphene (Clomid), enclomiphene lacks the estrogen-like component (zuclomiphene) that causes many of clomiphene's side effects.
TB-500 →
A naturally occurring peptide found in nearly all human cells that helps cells move and rebuild. It plays a key role in tissue repair, new blood vessel growth, and calming inflammation. One of the most powerful wound-healing peptides identified, with strong results in heart, skin, and eye repair.