Quick Comparison
| GHRP-6 | HMG | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 2-3 hours | FSH component: 30 hours | LH component: 24 hours |
| Typical Dosage | Standard: 100-300 mcg subcutaneous two or three times daily on an empty stomach. Often combined with GHRH analogues (CJC-1295 or Sermorelin) for synergistic GH release. Must be administered fasted for optimal GH response. | Fertility (women): 75-150 IU intramuscular once daily, physician-directed with ultrasound monitoring. PCT/bodybuilding: 75-150 IU intramuscular every other day for 1-2 weeks, often alongside HCG. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection | Intramuscular or subcutaneous injection |
| Research Papers | 30 papers | 30 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
GHRP-6
GHRP-6 (Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-6) is one of the earliest synthetic GH secretagogues developed, first characterized in the 1980s. It is a hexapeptide (His-D-Trp-Ala-Trp-D-Phe-Lys-NH2) that acts as a full agonist at the GHS-R1a receptor, the subsequently identified endogenous receptor for ghrelin. GHRP-6 actually preceded the discovery of ghrelin itself — research on GHRPs led scientists to identify the receptor, which in turn led to the discovery of ghrelin as the endogenous ligand.
The GH-releasing mechanism follows the standard GHS-R1a pathway: Gq/11-mediated PLC activation, IP3-dependent calcium mobilization, and GH vesicle exocytosis from pituitary somatotrophs. GHRP-6 also suppresses somatostatin and stimulates hypothalamic GHRH release. What distinguishes GHRP-6 from later GHRPs is its pronounced ghrelin-mimetic effect on appetite regulation — it strongly activates orexigenic NPY/AgRP neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus, producing intense hunger within 20-30 minutes of injection.
This strong appetite stimulation, while problematic for those seeking fat loss, makes GHRP-6 potentially useful in clinical settings involving cachexia, anorexia, or conditions requiring caloric intake increase. GHRP-6 also demonstrates cytoprotective properties in various tissues. Research has shown protective effects in cardiac tissue (reducing ischemia-reperfusion injury), hepatic tissue (attenuating fibrosis in animal models), and gastric mucosa. These cytoprotective effects appear to be mediated through pathways independent of GH release, involving anti-inflammatory and anti-apoptotic signaling. The compound also elevates cortisol and prolactin to a moderate degree, though less than hexarelin.
HMG
Human Menopausal Gonadotropin is a purified urinary extract containing both follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) activity, sourced from the urine of postmenopausal women. After menopause, the loss of ovarian negative feedback (estradiol and inhibin) results in dramatically elevated pituitary gonadotropin secretion — FSH and LH levels rise 10-20 fold, providing a natural source of these hormones for pharmaceutical extraction.
The FSH component binds to FSH receptors (FSHR) on Sertoli cells in males and granulosa cells in females. FSHR is a Gs-coupled GPCR that activates cAMP/PKA signaling, driving the expression of genes essential for gametogenesis. In males, FSH-stimulated Sertoli cells produce androgen-binding protein (which concentrates testosterone locally), inhibin B (which provides negative feedback to the pituitary), and multiple growth factors that support spermatogonial proliferation and differentiation through the stages of spermatogenesis. In females, FSH drives follicular development — stimulating granulosa cell proliferation, estradiol synthesis via aromatase induction, and the growth of ovarian follicles from the pre-antral to the pre-ovulatory stage.
The LH component acts on Leydig cells in males (stimulating testosterone production via the LHCGR/cAMP/StAR steroidogenic pathway) and on theca cells in females (stimulating androgen precursor production that granulosa cells convert to estradiol). In females undergoing fertility treatment, the LH component is also critical for final oocyte maturation and ovulation triggering. The combination of both FSH and LH activity in HMG provides more complete gonadal stimulation than either gonadotropin alone — FSH drives the cellular proliferation and maturation processes while LH provides the steroidogenic and final maturation signals. This dual activity is why HMG is sometimes preferred over purified FSH preparations in certain fertility protocols, particularly in hypogonadotropic patients who lack endogenous LH.
Risks & Safety
GHRP-6
Common
intense hunger, water retention and bloating, moderate cortisol and prolactin elevation, headache.
Serious
disrupted blood sugar control, tolerance build-up with continuous use, breast tissue growth in men from prolactin.
Rare
significant swelling, allergic reactions.
HMG
Common
pain and bruising at the injection site, headache, bloating, tender breasts.
Serious
in women, can cause dangerous overstimulation of the ovaries (potentially life-threatening), and increases the chance of twins or higher-order multiples; in men, can cause breast tissue growth.
Rare
blood clots, twisted ovary, severe allergic reaction. Requires close monitoring with blood tests and ultrasounds during fertility treatment.
Full Profiles
GHRP-6 →
One of the oldest growth hormone peptides, developed in the 1980s. Known for strong GH release but also extreme hunger — it makes you ravenous within 20-30 minutes of injection. This makes it bad for fat loss but potentially useful for people who need to gain weight or struggle with appetite. Research on this peptide actually led to the discovery of ghrelin (the hunger hormone) itself. Also shows protective effects on the heart, liver, and stomach lining.
HMG →
A fertility medication made from hormones extracted from postmenopausal women's urine. It contains both the hormones that stimulate egg development in women and sperm production in men. Used for fertility treatment in both sexes. Some bodybuilders also use it after steroid cycles to help their natural hormone production bounce back.