HGH vs Rapamycin

FDA Approved vs FDA Approved
monitor Mechanism-based · 55% Both HGH and Rapamycin affect insulin sensitivity or blood glucose. Monitor fasting glucose and HbA1c. Consider adding an insulin sensitizer (metformin/berberine).

Molecular Data

HGH Rapamycin
Weight 22,124 Da 914.17 Da
Half-life 3-4 hours (SC), 20-30 minutes (IV) ~62 hours
Chain 191 amino acids
Type Single-chain polypeptide with two disulfide bridges Macrolide lactone (C51H79NO13)

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
Rapamycin
01 Lifespan extension demonstrated in every model organism tested (yeast, worms, flies, mice)
02 Upregulation of autophagy and cellular quality control mechanisms
03 Reduction of senescent cell burden and associated inflammatory secretome
04 Improved immune function at low pulsed doses (paradoxical immune enhancement)
05 Reduced age-related inflammation (inflammaging) via mTORC1 inhibition
06 Enhanced mitochondrial function and biogenesis
07 Potential reduction in age-related cancer risk through growth pathway suppression
08 Improved vaccine response in elderly populations at low intermittent doses

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
Rapamycin
3-6 mg once weekly (longevity protocol) / Once weekly (pulsed longevity) or daily (immunosuppressive)

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
Rapamycin
Mouth sores / aphthous ulcers (most common, usually dose-dependent and self-limiting)
Mild lipid changes (elevated LDL cholesterol and triglycerides)
Temporary glucose elevation or mildly impaired fasting glucose
Mild gastrointestinal discomfort (nausea, loose stools)
Skin changes (mild acne, slower wound healing at injection/cut sites)
Contraindications
Active cancer (may accelerate tumor growth)
Acute critical illness (increased mortality in ICU patients)
Closed epiphyses in children (for growth promotion)
Pregnancy/breastfeeding
Active serious infection or immunocompromised state
Hypersensitivity to rapamycin/sirolimus or any macrolide compound
Severe hepatic impairment (rapamycin is extensively hepatically metabolized)
Planned major surgery within 2-4 weeks (impaired wound healing)
Pregnancy or breastfeeding
Concurrent use of strong CYP3A4 inhibitors without dose adjustment (ketoconazole, itraconazole, clarithromycin, grapefruit juice)

Research Evidence

HGH Rapamycin
Status FDA Approved FDA Approved
References 4 studies 5 studies
Latest 2024 March 2023
FDA Approved Yes Yes

This comparison is for educational and research purposes only. Consult a healthcare professional before use.