Semorelin Pen
Sermorelin is a synthetic growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) analogue studied for human-relevant research on growth hormone regulation, metabolic health, and cellular regeneration. This peptide is widely used in studies investigating pituitary stimulation, IGF-1 production, and age-related metabolic function.
Key Features
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🧪 cGMP manufactured in an FDA-registered facility
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✅ ≥98% purity confirmed by HPLC analysis
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📄 Batch-specific Certificates of Analysis (COAs) included
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💉 Sterile, lyophilized pens for research use only
Human-Relevant Research Applications
âš¡ Stimulates natural growth hormone release
Sermorelin is a clinically studied GHRH analogue that stimulates the pituitary to produce growth hormone in a physiologic, pulsatile pattern, helping support natural GH secretion rather than introducing external hormone.
🔗 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18031173/
🧬 Raises IGF‑1 levels in adults with deficiency
Human data show that growth hormone secretagogue therapy including sermorelin can increase serum IGF‑1, a key mediator of GH’s effects, when compliance and dosing are followed.
🔗 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28830317/
🙌 Clinical use in growth hormone deficiency
Sermorelin has been used in adults and children with diagnosed growth hormone deficiency, where it increases endogenous GH levels and is generally well tolerated.
🔗 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18031173/
Mechanism Summary
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Mimics endogenous GHRH to stimulate pituitary GH secretion
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Indirectly elevates IGF-1, supporting anabolic and regenerative pathways
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Supports human-relevant studies in metabolism, tissue repair, and aging
Frequently Research Questions
How does Sermorelin differ from synthetic GH administration?
Sermorelin stimulates natural GH production, avoiding supraphysiological GH spikes.
Is it suitable for metabolic research?
Yes. It supports glucose regulation, body composition, and IGF-1-related pathways.
Can Sermorelin be used for anti-aging studies?
Yes. It helps investigate GH-dependent tissue maintenance and regenerative capacity in human-relevant models.
Scientific References
🧪 Copinschi et al. – growth hormone stimulation with GHRH analog
• GHRH analogs (like sermorelin) stimulate pituitary growth hormone (GH) release, showing biological activity in humans
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18031173/
📈 Ho et al. (Stanley et al., 2011) – GHRH analog effects on GH & IGF‑1
• A GHRH analog (tesamorelin) increases endogenous GH secretion and raises IGF‑1 levels in healthy men
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20943777/
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