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Hexarelin vs Sermorelin

Both Hexarelin and Sermorelin are used for growth-hormone. Here's how their evidence, dosing, and regulatory status actually compare.

Hexarelin

Evidence B

Hexarelin (HEX)

The strongest GH-releasing hexapeptide and one of the few peptides with documented direct cardiac benefits in animal models. Tachyphylaxis (diminished response over time) limits long-term use.

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Sermorelin

Evidence B+

Sermorelin Acetate (GHRH 1-29)

The original synthetic GHRH(1–29) and the most accessible GH-stimulating peptide for age-related hormone decline. Stimulates the body's own pulsatile GH release rather than replacing it.

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Side-by-Side

AttributeHexarelinSermorelin
Evidence GradeBB+
FDA StatusNot FDA-approved — research compound (cardioprotective signals investigated)FDA-approved (1990) for pediatric growth hormone deficiency; off-label adult use via compounding pharmacies
Typical Dose100 mcg, 1–2 times daily (subcutaneous)200–500 mcg before bed (subcutaneous)
Clinics Indexed41220
Categoriesgrowth-hormone, recoverygrowth-hormone, anti-aging

Key reported benefits — Hexarelin

  • Strongest GH spike of GHRPs
  • Cardioprotective signals
  • Recovery

Key reported benefits — Sermorelin

  • Natural GH release
  • Improved sleep
  • Lean body mass
  • Recovery

Educational use only

This comparison is for educational purposes and not medical advice. Peptide selection should be made with a licensed medical professional based on your individual goals, health history, and current evidence quality.

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