HGH vs Propranolol
FDA Approved vs FDA Approved
monitor Mechanism-based · 55% Both HGH and Propranolol affect insulin sensitivity or blood glucose. Monitor fasting glucose and HbA1c. Consider adding an insulin sensitizer (metformin/berberine).
Molecular Data
HGH Propranolol
Weight 22,124 Da 259.34 Da
Half-life 3-4 hours (SC), 20-30 minutes (IV) ~4-5 hours
Chain 191 amino acids —
Type Single-chain polypeptide with two disulfide bridges Aryloxypropanolamine derivative (C16H21NO2)
Key Benefits
HGH
01 Improved body composition (increased lean mass, decreased fat)
02 Enhanced bone mineral density
03 Improved lipid profile
04 Increased exercise capacity
05 Better quality of life and mood
06 Skin, hair, and nail improvements
07 Enhanced recovery and healing
Propranolol
01 Rapid reduction of elevated heart rate within 30-60 minutes of oral dosing
02 Effective against tachycardia from both trenbolone and clenbuterol through non-selective beta blockade
03 Well-established anxiolytic effect for performance anxiety without cognitive impairment or sedation
04 Short half-life allows flexible as-needed dosing without prolonged hemodynamic effects
05 Extensive clinical safety data spanning over 50 years of use
06 Inexpensive and widely available as a generic medication
07 Does not cause dependence or withdrawal symptoms typical of benzodiazepines
08 Effective for controlling physical anxiety symptoms (tremor, palpitations, sweating)
Dosing Protocols
HGH
1-4 IU daily (0.33-1.33mg); start low and titrate up / Once daily or split into 2 doses (morning and evening)
Medical GHD (Starting) 0.15-0.3mg/day (0.5-1 IU) Once daily
Medical GHD (Maintenance) 0.4-0.8mg/day (1.2-2.4 IU) Once daily
Anti-Aging/Wellness 1-2 IU/day (0.33-0.67mg) Once daily
Body Recomposition 2-4 IU/day (0.67-1.33mg) Once or twice daily
Performance (Higher Risk) 4-8 IU/day (1.33-2.67mg) Split twice daily
Propranolol
10-80 mg/day / 1-3 times daily (or as needed)
Side Effects
HGH
Water retention and fluid accumulation
Joint pain and stiffness
Carpal tunnel syndrome (usually resolves with dose reduction)
Headaches
Numbness/tingling in hands
Propranolol
Fatigue and reduced exercise tolerance, particularly during the first week of use
Cold extremities (hands and feet) due to beta-2 blockade of peripheral vasodilation
Bradycardia (heart rate below 60 bpm), usually dose-dependent and asymptomatic
Dizziness or lightheadedness, especially when standing quickly
Gastrointestinal discomfort (nausea, diarrhea, constipation)
Contraindications
Active cancer (may accelerate tumor growth)
Acute critical illness (increased mortality in ICU patients)
Closed epiphyses in children (for growth promotion)
Pregnancy/breastfeeding
Asthma or severe reactive airway disease (non-selective beta blockade can trigger life-threatening bronchospasm)
Decompensated heart failure or cardiogenic shock
Sinus bradycardia (resting HR below 50 bpm) or second/third-degree heart block
Severe peripheral arterial disease or Raynaud's syndrome
Pheochromocytoma without prior alpha blockade (risk of hypertensive crisis from unopposed alpha stimulation)
Research Evidence
HGH Propranolol
Status FDA Approved FDA Approved
References 4 studies 5 studies
Latest 2024 2023
FDA Approved Yes Yes
This comparison is for educational and research purposes only. Consult a healthcare professional before use.