Quick Comparison
| Ipamorelin | Pinealon | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 2 hours | Approximately 30 minutes (extremely short — effects attributed to gene expression changes that outlast plasma exposure) |
| Typical Dosage | Standard: 200-300 mcg subcutaneous two or three times daily. Often combined with CJC-1295 (no DAC) 100-300 mcg in the same syringe for synergistic GH release. Typically dosed before bed and/or upon waking on an empty stomach. | Oral (capsule): 100-200 mg once daily for 10-30 day cycles, often repeated 2-3 times per year. Subcutaneous injection: 1-10 mg per dose, alternate days for 10-20 day cycles. Intranasal: 5-10 drops per nostril daily for 10-20 day cycles. Cycling rather than continuous use is the standard Khavinson protocol. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection | Oral capsule, subcutaneous injection, or intranasal spray (cycled) |
| Research Papers | 4 papers | 5 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Ipamorelin
Ipamorelin is a pentapeptide growth hormone secretagogue that binds selectively to the growth hormone secretagogue receptor type 1a (GHS-R1a), the same receptor that endogenous ghrelin activates. However, unlike ghrelin and other GHRPs such as GHRP-6 and Hexarelin, ipamorelin demonstrates remarkable selectivity — it stimulates robust GH release while causing minimal elevation of cortisol, prolactin, and ACTH at therapeutic doses.
At the molecular level, ipamorelin binding to GHS-R1a on pituitary somatotrophs activates a Gq/11-coupled signaling cascade that stimulates phospholipase C (PLC), generating inositol trisphosphate (IP3) and diacylglycerol (DAG). IP3 triggers calcium release from intracellular stores, while DAG activates protein kinase C. The resulting rise in intracellular calcium triggers GH vesicle exocytosis. This mechanism is distinct from and synergistic with the cAMP pathway activated by GHRH, which is why combining ipamorelin with a GHRH analogue like CJC-1295 produces amplified GH pulses.
The selectivity of ipamorelin is attributed to its specific binding conformation at the GHS-R1a receptor, which activates the GH release pathway without engaging the broader hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. It does not significantly activate appetite centers in the hypothalamus at standard doses, nor does it stimulate ACTH release from corticotrophs. This clean side-effect profile has made it the most widely prescribed growth hormone secretagogue in anti-aging and regenerative medicine, often considered the safest starting point for patients new to GH-optimizing peptide therapy.
Pinealon
Pinealon is a short tripeptide (Glu-Asp-Arg) belonging to the Khavinson family of peptide bioregulators — small peptides hypothesised to regulate gene expression in tissue-specific ways by binding directly to DNA promoter regions. Pinealon is the brain- and pineal-gland-targeted member of this family, designed to penetrate cells and the nuclear membrane to interact with promoter sequences of genes involved in neuronal function and circadian regulation.
Proposed mechanisms include modulation of melatonin synthesis pathways (via effects on pineal gland function), upregulation of antioxidant defence enzymes in neurons, and protection against oxidative stress from age-related accumulation of reactive oxygen species. Russian preclinical studies have reported pinealon-induced increases in expression of genes involved in serotonin and melatonin metabolism, neurotrophic factor signalling, and antioxidant capacity, alongside protective effects against neurotoxin-induced neuronal damage in animal models.
The extremely short plasma half-life (around 30 minutes) is a feature shared with all Khavinson tripeptides — the proposed model is that the peptides act as transient signalling molecules that trigger longer-lasting changes in gene expression, with effects persisting well beyond plasma clearance. This model would explain the use of pulse-dosing protocols (10-30 day courses repeated periodically) rather than continuous administration. Importantly, almost all published efficacy data comes from Russian research groups associated with the original Khavinson laboratory, and the bioregulator framework has not been independently validated in Western clinical settings. Mechanistic claims should be treated as preliminary, and clinical use remains largely anecdotal outside Russia.
Risks & Safety
Ipamorelin
Common
headache, lightheadedness, temporary water retention, injection site irritation.
Serious
theoretical risk of promoting existing tumour growth.
Rare
allergic reactions, fainting.
Pinealon
Common
generally reported as well tolerated; mild headache or transient drowsiness occasionally reported.
Serious
very limited Western clinical data — long-term safety not established outside Russian research populations.
Rare
allergic reactions. Like other Khavinson bioregulators, the evidence base is thinner than the marketing suggests.
Full Profiles
Ipamorelin →
Considered the safest and most beginner-friendly growth hormone peptide. It stimulates your body to release more growth hormone without the unwanted side effects (hunger spikes, stress hormone increases) that come with older GH peptides. This clean profile makes it the most commonly prescribed GH peptide in anti-aging clinics. Usually the recommended starting point for anyone new to peptide therapy, and often combined with CJC-1295 for stronger results.
Pinealon →
A short three-amino-acid peptide (Glu-Asp-Arg) developed by Russian researcher Vladimir Khavinson as a brain bioregulator targeting the pineal gland and broader nervous system. Promoted for circadian rhythm regulation, neuroprotection, and supporting age-related cognitive function. Sits in the same Khavinson bioregulator family as epithalon, cortagen, vilon, and AEDG. Most evidence is from Russian research and animal studies — rigorous Western clinical trials are limited.