CNCCurrency
GLP-1 Specialist

woundcarping said:Clearly it’s normal and common knowledge that you need 4iu of HGH to match 1mg of Tesa. Also that curiosity means I’m focused on you “saving so much money” ($1/day).

woundcarping said:Clearly it’s normal and common knowledge that you need 4iu of HGH to match 1mg of Tesa. Also that curiosity means I’m focused on you “saving so much money” ($1/day).
Looking forward to the bro science chart that shows thiswoundcarping said:Clearly it’s normal and common knowledge that you need 4iu of HGH to match 1mg of Tesa. Also that curiosity means I’m focused on you “saving so much money” ($1/day).

woundcarping said:Clearly it’s normal and common knowledge that you need...
woundcarping said:...curiosity means I’m focused on you “saving so much money” ($1/day).
Habibibi said:Looking forward to the bro science chart that shows this
Habibibi said:If I want to keep z-score > +2, then 20mg Tesa will last me 20 days... because I need at least 4ius to get my z-score that high on exogenous gh.
Habibibi said:...Saving so much money using Tesa over hgh.
ChatGPT said:So if someone truly needs 4 IU HGH to equal the IGF-1 z-score produced by 1 mg tesamorelin, possibilities include:
underdosed/weak HGH
bad reconstitution/storage
timing differences in labs
obesity/insulin resistance blunting IGF-1 conversion
unusually strong response to tesamorelin
unusually weak hepatic response to HGH
comparing trough vs peak conditions
woundcarping said:I'm seeing around $1/mg on Tesa and $.50/iu on HGH.

woundcarping said:This all started with me being curious how you were saving money with Tesa vs HGH. I'm curious because I have no experience and am learning about IGF-1 and its manipulation.
View attachment 24773
YOU said YOU need 1mg of Tesa or 4iu of HGH to "keep a z-score >+2" and Tesa saves you "so much money" over HGH.
1mg Tesa= $1
4iu HGH= $2
Thus you're saving $1/day. I'm impressed that's meaningful savings for you.
In this economy, saving 50% is a big deal to me. I'd rather pay 365/year instead of 730/year for my supply.woundcarping said:This all started with me being curious how you were saving money with Tesa vs HGH. I'm curious because I have no experience and am learning about IGF-1 and its manipulation.
View attachment 24773
YOU said YOU need 1mg of Tesa or 4iu of HGH to "keep a z-score >+2" and Tesa saves you "so much money" over HGH.
1mg Tesa= $1
4iu HGH= $2
Thus you're saving $1/day. I'm impressed that's meaningful savings for you.


did you start at 2iu immediately and keep dose static? i just got back igf-1 pre hgh, sitting at 201 and z score of .8. I am starting an extremely conservative titration of .5 iu daily since it is my first time working with gh or secretagogues, but given that i have excellent insulin sensitivity as a result of my tirzepatide use, i am wondering if it would make more sense to titrate more quickly. i am also monitoring with a CGM, although i just started so dont even have a meaningful baseline yet (fasting insuling is 5.4 though)sfkid said:Baseline/zscore: 188/.7
10 weeks of HGH 2iu daily
Baseline/zcore: 294/1.8

Started at 2 and stayed at. You won't see much increase in insulin at 2iu...hodlplus said:did you start at 2iu immediately and keep dose static? i just got back igf-1 pre hgh, sitting at 201 and z score of .8. I am starting an extremely conservative titration of .5 iu daily since it is my first time working with gh or secretagogues, but given that i have excellent insulin sensitivity as a result of my tirzepatide use, i am wondering if it would make more sense to titrate more quickly. i am also monitoring with a CGM, although i just started so dont even have a meaningful baseline yet (fasting insuling is 5.4 though)
Jesus Christ, man. I didnt know you were a Michelin rated Master Chef. That's some cooking.wildweasel said:Not going to reply to anyone specific here
First, claiming that a secretagogue is going to increase IGF-1 levels more than HGH itself is absolute non-sense, whos supposed to believe that.
Second, Z-Score it not a useful metric to track in this discussion. Z score is age-adjustd standard deviations above or below mean. It's a lot tougher to boost 0 -> 1 than it is 1 -> 2.
You want to follow IGF-1 Levels compared to your personal baseline, thats the useful metric to follow, not Z-score, thats only useful for tracking how prone someone may be to developing acromegaly or some other GH-related disease when compared to the general population.
Tesa was found to increase IGF-1 levels vs placebo by 50% at 1mg and 65% at 2mg: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16052083/
Another Tesa trial examined only 2mg daily dosing and concluded that it increased IGF-1 levels by 85% https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa072375
This study on HGH concluded that 2iu led to 70-100% increase in IGF1 levels, and 4iu led to 150-200% inrease in IGF-1 levels: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3288652/
Tesa 1mg -- +50% IGF-1
Tesa 2mg -- +65%-80% IGF-1
HGH 2iu -- +70%-100% IGF-1
HGH 4iu -- +150%-200% IGF-1
If we assume that 1mg tesa = 2iu hgh in cost, its clear that hgh provides the more cost-effective means of improving IGF-1
I've tried both hgh and tesamorelin, which is how I was able to compare them for my needs of boosting igf-1 z-score to around +2. You speak in population statistics, which is useless to my n=1 case, and will be useless for others too.wildweasel said:Not going to reply to anyone specific here
First, claiming that a secretagogue is going to increase IGF-1 levels more than HGH itself is absolute non-sense, whos supposed to believe that.
Second, Z-Score it not a useful metric to track in this discussion. Z score is age-adjustd standard deviations above or below mean. It's a lot tougher to boost 0 -> 1 than it is 1 -> 2.
You want to follow IGF-1 Levels compared to your personal baseline, thats the useful metric to follow, not Z-score, thats only useful for tracking how prone someone may be to developing acromegaly or some other GH-related disease when compared to the general population.
Tesa was found to increase IGF-1 levels vs placebo by 50% at 1mg and 65% at 2mg: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16052083/
Another Tesa trial examined only 2mg daily dosing and concluded that it increased IGF-1 levels by 85% https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa072375
This study on HGH concluded that 2iu led to 70-100% increase in IGF1 levels, and 4iu led to 150-200% inrease in IGF-1 levels: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3288652/
Tesa 1mg -- +50% IGF-1
Tesa 2mg -- +65%-80% IGF-1
HGH 2iu -- +70%-100% IGF-1
HGH 4iu -- +150%-200% IGF-1
If we assume that 1mg tesa = 2iu hgh in cost, its clear that hgh provides the more cost-effective means of improving IGF-1

You are absolutely correct that everyone is different and if someone really wants to know how they react to something they need to get their own blood work doneHabibibi said:I've tried both hgh and tesamorelin, which is how I was able to compare them for my needs of boosting igf-1 z-score to around +2. You speak in population statistics, which is useless to my n=1 case, and will be useless for others too.
These igf1 increase levels for hgh are AVERAGE numbers, you need to confirm they work for you. Good starting point, but not everyone will have 100% increase on 2iu hgh. Patient population also matters, as the tesamorelin study included only hiv patients, whose igf1 is low compared to healthy population.

most people chase it for fat mobilization, recovery, and hyperplasia.Smiter said:Jesus Christ, man. I didnt know you were a Michelin rated Master Chef. That's some cooking.
Just one question though, even if somatomedin is my favorite hormone, why would someone want to increase it systemically, when there are other viable options out there now? It's the main reason I am so anti-GH. I am really sensitive to it as well. That z-score thing is a concern. Thousands of biohackers have had fluid retention, joint pain, and other issues due to GH-mediated systemic IGF increase, especially without the gear to increase receptor action.. I still remember Sly's Aussie GH scandal during Rambo 4 production. He was so bloated.

copy that good to know, will likely be jumping to 1iu, monitoring for a bit then quickly moving to 2.sfkid said:Started at 2 and stayed at. You won't see much increase in insulin at 2iu...
My favorite. Superior to hypertrophy. But I was under the impression that somatomedin through its activation of MGF was the primary driver of this. Is it not so?wildweasel said:hyperplasia

You’re not wrong, mgf plays a role in hyperplasia, and personally, I’m not even convinced that gh plays a huge role in it, but it is what the mass monsters of the 80s believed and what many body builders still use gh to chaseSmiter said:My favorite. Superior to hypertrophy. But I was under the impression that somatomedin through its activation of MGF was the primary driver of this. Is it not so?
Ah, the days before the discovery of MGF.. Yeah, my understanding is that hyperplasia occurs at the end of the muscle fibers first where the influx of satellite cells cause division and new neural connections at the junction. This is the most common theory though it is not confirmed yet. All they know for certain is that while lab studies did not find hyperplasia in humans, they did find hyperplasia in strength-trained, experienced athletes. I looked for patterns in those who had it. That's how I learned about Charles Poliquin. His training principles seemed to indicate the presence of hyperplasia. I am not certain but time under tension, overcoming isometrics, and slow eccentric stretches at the end of a muscle's movement seems to drive it the most.wildweasel said:You’re not wrong, mgf plays a role in hyperplasia, and personally, I’m not even convinced that gh plays a huge role in it, but it is what the mass monsters of the 80s believed and what many body builders still use gh to chase

Nice I’m going to give the Poliquin biceps curl a shot tomorrow it looks killer thanks for sharingSmiter said:Ah, the days before the discovery of MGF.. Yeah, my understanding is that hyperplasia occurs at the end of the muscle fibers first where the influx of satellite cells cause division and new neural connections at the junction. This is the most common theory though it is not confirmed yet. All they know for certain is that while lab studies did not find hyperplasia in humans, they did find hyperplasia in strength-trained, experienced athletes. I looked for patterns in those who had it. That's how I learned about Charles Poliquin. His training principles seemed to indicate the presence of hyperplasia. I am not certain but time under tension, overcoming isometrics, and slow eccentric stretches at the end of a muscle's movement seems to drive it the most.
P.S:- Try the Poliquin biceps curl...It's an annihilator, trust me.
Poliquin curls, Zottman curls, and my own patented Androck curls...thats my biceps routine. If I can lift my arm the next day, I have failed...lolwildweasel said:Nice I’m going to give the Poliquin biceps curl a shot tomorrow it looks killer thanks for sharing

Wrong.wildweasel said:Not going to reply to anyone specific here
First, claiming that a secretagogue is going to increase IGF-1 levels more than HGH itself is absolute non-sense, whos supposed to believe that.
Second, Z-Score it not a useful metric to track in this discussion. Z score is age-adjustd standard deviations above or below mean. It's a lot tougher to boost 0 -> 1 than it is 1 -> 2.
You want to follow IGF-1 Levels compared to your personal baseline, thats the useful metric to follow, not Z-score, thats only useful for tracking how prone someone may be to developing acromegaly or some other GH-related disease when compared to the general population.
Tesa was found to increase IGF-1 levels vs placebo by 50% at 1mg and 65% at 2mg: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16052083/
Another Tesa trial examined only 2mg daily dosing and concluded that it increased IGF-1 levels by 85% https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa072375
This study on HGH concluded that 2iu led to 70-100% increase in IGF1 levels, and 4iu led to 150-200% inrease in IGF-1 levels: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3288652/
Tesa 1mg -- +50% IGF-1
Tesa 2mg -- +65%-80% IGF-1
HGH 2iu -- +70%-100% IGF-1
HGH 4iu -- +150%-200% IGF-1
If we assume that 1mg tesa = 2iu hgh in cost, its clear that hgh provides the more cost-effective means of improving IGF-1