Quick Comparison
| EPO | Hexarelin | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | IV: 5 hours | Subcutaneous: 24 hours | Darbepoetin (long-acting): 48 hours | 1.2 hours |
| Typical Dosage | Clinical (anemia): 50-300 IU/kg subcutaneous or IV three times weekly, titrated to target hemoglobin. Performance (illicit, dangerous): 50-200 IU/kg subcutaneous two or three times weekly. Must have regular hematocrit monitoring. | Standard: 100-200 mcg subcutaneous two or three times daily on an empty stomach. Must be cycled — desensitization occurs within 2-4 weeks of continuous use. Typical cycling: 2 weeks on, 2 weeks off. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous or intravenous injection | Subcutaneous injection |
| Research Papers | 30 papers | 6 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
EPO
Erythropoietin is a 165-amino-acid glycoprotein hormone primarily produced by peritubular interstitial fibroblasts in the renal cortex in response to hypoxia (low oxygen levels). The oxygen-sensing mechanism is elegant: under normal oxygen conditions, prolyl hydroxylase domain (PHD) enzymes hydroxylate the transcription factor HIF-2α (hypoxia-inducible factor 2 alpha), marking it for ubiquitination by the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) protein and proteasomal degradation. When oxygen drops, PHD activity decreases, HIF-2α accumulates, translocates to the nucleus, and drives EPO gene transcription.
Secreted EPO circulates to the bone marrow and binds to EPO receptors (EPOR) on erythroid progenitor cells — specifically colony-forming unit erythroid (CFU-E) cells and proerythroblasts. EPOR is a homodimeric cytokine receptor that activates JAK2 (Janus kinase 2) upon ligand binding. JAK2 phosphorylates the receptor and itself, creating docking sites for STAT5 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 5). Phosphorylated STAT5 dimerizes, enters the nucleus, and activates transcription of anti-apoptotic genes including Bcl-xL and Mcl-1. The primary effect is preventing the default apoptosis of erythroid progenitors — without EPO, approximately 90% of these cells undergo programmed cell death. EPO rescues them, allowing proliferation and differentiation through the reticulocyte stage into mature red blood cells.
The physiological result is increased red blood cell mass, hemoglobin concentration, and hematocrit — directly increasing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. Each red blood cell contains approximately 280 million hemoglobin molecules, each capable of binding four oxygen molecules. Even modest increases in hematocrit significantly improve oxygen delivery to tissues, which is why EPO abuse in endurance sports produces measurable performance gains. However, the same hematocrit elevation carries serious cardiovascular risks: blood viscosity increases exponentially above hematocrit values of 50%, dramatically increasing the risk of thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, stroke, and myocardial infarction. Several competitive cyclists died from EPO-related complications in the 1980s-90s, and WADA implemented hematocrit testing limits (initially 50%) before developing direct EPO detection assays.
Hexarelin
Hexarelin is a synthetic hexapeptide (His-D-2-MeTrp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2) that acts as one of the most potent agonists of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHS-R1a). Its strong receptor affinity produces the highest GH release amplitude among the GHRP family, but this potency comes with broader neuroendocrine activation compared to more selective agents like ipamorelin.
At the pituitary level, hexarelin binding to GHS-R1a activates Gq/11-coupled phospholipase C, generating IP3 and DAG. IP3-mediated calcium release from intracellular stores triggers massive GH vesicle exocytosis. The strong GH response also comes with significant stimulation of cortisol (via ACTH release from corticotrophs) and prolactin release from lactotrophs — side effects that limit its clinical utility compared to more selective secretagogues.
Uniquely among GHRPs, hexarelin demonstrates significant cardioprotective properties independent of GH release. GHS-R1a receptors are expressed on cardiomyocytes, and hexarelin binding activates survival signaling through the PI3K/Akt and ERK1/2 pathways, protecting cardiac cells from ischemia-reperfusion injury and apoptosis. Hexarelin also binds to the scavenger receptor CD36 on macrophages and cardiac tissue, which may contribute to its anti-atherosclerotic and cardioprotective effects. Animal studies have demonstrated reduced infarct size and improved cardiac function following hexarelin administration. However, a significant practical limitation is desensitization — continuous hexarelin use leads to progressive reduction in GH response within 2-4 weeks, necessitating cycling protocols to maintain effectiveness.
Risks & Safety
EPO
Common
high blood pressure, headache, injection site pain, flu-like symptoms when first starting.
Serious
dangerously high red blood cell count (makes blood too thick and can cause clots), blood clots (stroke, heart attack, deep vein thrombosis, lung embolism), and in rare cases the body can stop making red blood cells entirely due to antibodies.
Rare
deaths in athletes from unmonitored use causing fatal blood thickening. Multiple cyclist and endurance athlete deaths have been attributed to EPO abuse. Banned in competitive sports.
Hexarelin
Common
elevated cortisol, elevated prolactin, water retention, increased appetite, headache.
Serious
desensitisation after 2-4 weeks of continuous use, breast tissue growth in men from prolactin elevation.
Rare
severe water retention, wrist pain/numbness.
Full Profiles
EPO →
A hormone your kidneys make that tells your bone marrow to produce more red blood cells. More red blood cells means more oxygen-carrying capacity in your blood. Used to treat anemia from kidney disease, chemotherapy, or blood loss. Notorious for abuse in endurance sports — cyclists and runners have used it to boost performance because it dramatically increases oxygen delivery.
Hexarelin →
The most powerful growth hormone releasing peptide available — it triggers the biggest GH spike of any GHRP. Also uniquely protective for the heart, which has made it interesting for cardiac research. The downside is that its potency comes with more side effects than gentler options like Ipamorelin: it raises cortisol (stress hormone) and prolactin more than any other GHRP, and your body builds tolerance within 2-4 weeks, requiring cycling.