Enclomiphene vs Proviron
Well Studied vs Well Studied
avoid Mechanism-based · 64% Both Enclomiphene and Proviron carry hepatotoxic risk. Combining hepatotoxic compounds significantly increases liver damage potential. If unavoidable, include liver support (TUDCA/NAC) and monitor ALT/AST frequently.
Molecular Data
Enclomiphene Proviron
Weight 405.96 Da 304.47 Da
Half-life ~10 hours ~12 hours
Type Trans-isomer of clomifene (selective estrogen receptor modulator) DHT derivative (C20H32O2)
Key Benefits
Enclomiphene
01 Raises endogenous testosterone by stimulating the HPTA axis
02 Preserves fertility and spermatogenesis (unlike exogenous testosterone)
03 No estrogenic agonist activity (unlike racemic clomifene/Clomid)
04 Oral dosing with no injections required
05 Does not suppress the HPTA or cause testicular atrophy
06 Effective for post-cycle therapy and secondary hypogonadism
07 Well-tolerated with a favorable side effect profile
Proviron
01 Strong SHBG binding frees more circulating testosterone, enhancing TRT efficacy
02 Improved mood, motivation, confidence, and overall sense of well-being
03 Significant enhancement of libido and sexual function
04 Anti-estrogenic effect reduces the need for dedicated aromatase inhibitors
05 Harder, drier, more defined physical appearance without water retention
06 Minimal hepatotoxicity due to absence of 17-alpha alkylation
07 May improve sperm quality at low doses in subfertile men
08 Rapid onset of subjective well-being effects (often within days)
Side Effects
Enclomiphene
Headache
Nausea or mild gastrointestinal discomfort
Hot flashes or flushing
Mood changes (irritability or emotional sensitivity)
Fatigue during initial adjustment
Proviron
Accelerated hair thinning or loss in those predisposed to male pattern baldness (DHT-mediated)
Mild suppression of endogenous testosterone at higher doses (though less suppressive than most AAS)
Oily skin and increased sebum production
Mild HDL cholesterol suppression with extended use
Increased body hair growth
Contraindications
Known hypersensitivity to clomifene or enclomiphene
Pre-existing liver disease or significantly elevated liver enzymes
Active or history of thromboembolic disorders
Pregnancy or women who may become pregnant (teratogenic risk)
Primary hypogonadism (testicular failure -- enclomiphene requires functional testes)
Pituitary tumors or undiagnosed pituitary pathology
Prostate cancer (active or history of androgen-sensitive prostate cancer)
Severe liver impairment (though hepatotoxicity risk is minimal)
Breast cancer in males
Hypersensitivity to mesterolone or any excipients
Women who are pregnant or may become pregnant (androgenic effects on fetus)
Research Evidence
Enclomiphene Proviron
Status Well Studied Well Studied
References 5 studies 5 studies
FDA Approved No No
This comparison is for educational and research purposes only. Consult a healthcare professional before use.