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Research Profile Research Only Ipamorelin

Ipamorelin

Selective growth hormone release — clean, targeted, with minimal cortisol bleed.

Metabolic Health / Longevity / Recovery/31+ studies cited/Subcutaneous
Educational Use Only

This content is for informational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. This peptide has no approved human indication. Evidence is limited and regulatory context should be understood before any protocol discussion.

Decision Summary

Start with the research signal and risk posture before you read the full protocol discussion.

What It Is

Ipamorelin

Evidence Signal

2 indexed studies support the article, but the strength of evidence should be read from the cited data and context below.

Primary Caution

Read the research signal as exploratory rather than clinically settled.

Half-Life

~2 hours

Routes

Subcutaneous

Aliases

NNC 26-0161

Regulatory Posture

Research-only with no approved human indication.

On this page

Overview

Ipamorelin is a synthetic pentapeptide that acts as a selective agonist at the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR) — the same receptor targeted by the endogenous hunger hormone ghrelin. Among the GHRPs (growth hormone-releasing peptides), ipamorelin is considered the most selective, stimulating GH release with minimal activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis — meaning significantly less cortisol and prolactin elevation compared to older GHRPs like GHRP-2 and GHRP-6.

This selectivity profile makes ipamorelin one of the most widely studied research peptides in the GH secretagogue class, and it is frequently paired with CJC-1295 to create a synergistic GH-releasing stack that addresses both the GHRH receptor and the ghrelin receptor simultaneously.

Mechanism of Action

GHSR (Ghrelin Receptor) Agonism: Ipamorelin binds to the growth hormone secretagogue receptor 1a (GHSR-1a), which is expressed on pituitary somatotrophs. Activation of this receptor triggers a calcium-mediated intracellular signaling cascade that stimulates GH secretion independently of the GHRH pathway.

Selectivity Advantage: Unlike GHRP-2 and GHRP-6, ipamorelin shows minimal cross-reactivity with receptors mediating cortisol and prolactin release. This translates to a cleaner pharmacological profile with fewer off-target effects.

Synergy with GHRH Analogs: When combined with a GHRH analog (CJC-1295 or Sermorelin), ipamorelin and the GHRH analog act on complementary pathways — GHRH-R and GHSR-1a — producing GH release greater than either peptide alone. This synergy is why the CJC-1295 + Ipamorelin combination is one of the most common research protocols.

Clinical Research & Evidence

Evidence Level: 🟠 EL3 — Animal and early human data; no Phase III trials

StudyNKey Finding
Raun et al. 1998RatDose-dependent GH release; high specificity, no cortisol elevation
Aagaard et al. 1999PigMaintained GH secretion; bone mineral density preservation
Limited human dataN/APhase I tolerability data not published in major journals

Mechanism validation: The key published data validates the mechanism and selectivity. Clinical trials have not been conducted to establish efficacy or safety for specific human health indications.

Research-Referenced Dosing Protocols

Animal-extrapolated. No validated human dosing protocol exists.

Standalone:

  • 100–300 mcg subcutaneous injection, 1–3x daily
  • Typically timed before sleep to amplify the physiological nocturnal GH pulse

With CJC-1295:

  • Ipamorelin 100–200 mcg + CJC-1295 without DAC 100 mcg, once before bed
  • Or Ipamorelin 100–200 mcg at time of weekly CJC-1295 with DAC injection

Side Effects & Contraindications

Reported:

  • Water retention (less than with GHRP-2/6)
  • Increased hunger (ghrelin receptor activity)
  • Injection site reactions
  • Tingling extremities (transient)
  • Headache at higher doses

Compared to older GHRPs: Ipamorelin produces significantly less cortisol elevation, less prolactin stimulation, and less hunger than GHRP-2 or GHRP-6 — considered a safer selectivity profile.

Contraindications (theoretical):

  • Active malignancy
  • Insulin resistance / diabetes (GH elevation can worsen insulin sensitivity)
  • Pregnancy
RegionStatus
United StatesNot FDA approved; research chemical status
European UnionNo EMA approval
WADAProhibited (GH secretagogues)

Research Citations

  1. Raun K, et al. Ipamorelin, the first selective growth hormone secretagogue. Eur J Endocrinol. 1998.
  2. Aagaard NK, et al. Growth hormone secretagogues — mechanism and clinical use. Dan Med Bull. 1999.
  3. Bowers CY. GH-releasing peptide-2. Trends Endocrinol Metab. 1993 (background GHSR context).

Clinical Research

2 studies
EL31998·European Journal of Endocrinology
0

Ipamorelin, the First Selective Growth Hormone Secretagogue

Raun K, Hansen BS, Johansen NL, et al.

Ipamorelin produced selective, dose-dependent GH release with no effect on cortisol, prolactin, or ACTH at any dose tested — distinguishi...

EL21996·Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
N=32

Stimulation of the Growth Hormone (GH)-Insulin-Like Growth Factor I Axis by Daily Oral ...

Chapman IM, Bach MA, Van Cauter E, et al.

Oral GH secretagogue MK-677 increased GH pulse amplitude and 24-hour IGF-1 concentrations to young-adult levels in healthy elderly subjec...

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