CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin (Stacked Formulation)

Protocol Overview

Field Value
Name CJC-1295 / Ipamorelin Combination
Reference Code GH-STACK
Category Growth Hormone Secretagogue Combination (GHRH + GHSR Agonist)
Example Strengths 5 mg / 5 mg (varies by formulation)
Reference Range 100–300 mcg of each peptide per injection, 1–2 times daily (literature-based investigational use)
Frequency 1–2 times daily (fasted administration described in research contexts)
Key Safety Warning Not FDA-approved. Contraindicated in active malignancy, pituitary tumors, and pregnancy. Combination therapy may increase IGF-1 levels. Food intake, particularly elevated glucose, may significantly blunt GH response.

Mechanism of Action (Educational)

CJC-1295 is a growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) analog that stimulates the anterior pituitary to release growth hormone in a physiologic pulsatile pattern. Ipamorelin is a selective ghrelin receptor (GHSR-1a) agonist that stimulates pulsatile GH release without significant stimulation of cortisol or prolactin. When administered together, the combination provides synergistic stimulation of endogenous GH through complementary hypothalamic–pituitary pathways. Growth hormone pulses are typically observed within 15–30 minutes following administration.

Indications (Investigational / Literature)

Growth hormone optimization research
IGF-1 modulation investigations
Body composition studies
Recovery and sleep-related research

Administration (Literature)

Parameter Details
Route Subcutaneous
Frequency 1–2 times daily
Injection Sites Abdomen, thigh, upper arm (rotate sites)
Timing Typically administered in a fasted state; bedtime commonly described in research contexts

Pharmacokinetics (Literature)

CJC-1295 without DAC has an approximate half-life of ~30 minutes. Ipamorelin has an approximate half-life of ~2 hours. GH release is generally observed within 15–30 minutes following administration. High glucose intake may blunt GH response. Glucocorticoids may inhibit GHRH-mediated GH secretion.

Titration Schedule (Literature-Based Example)

Weeks 1–2 100 mcg / 100 mcg at bedtime
Weeks 3–4 200 mcg / 200 mcg 1–2 times daily
Week 5+ 200–300 mcg of each peptide per injection

Escalation is typically guided by IGF-1 response and tolerability.

Reconstitution & Concentration (Mathematical Standardization Model)

For educational standardization purposes, concentration may be normalized so that 0.10 mL (10 insulin units) = 100 mcg of each peptide.

Parameter Value
Target Concentration 1 mg/mL each peptide (1000 mcg/mL)
Unit Conversion 0.10 mL (10 units) = 100 mcg / 100 mcg
Example (5 mg / 5 mg vial) Reconstitute with 5.0 mL bacteriostatic water → 1 mg/mL each
Stability Up to 28 days refrigerated (2–8°C; varies by formulation)

Conversion Reference

10 units 100 mcg / 100 mcg
20 units 200 mcg / 200 mcg
30 units 300 mcg / 300 mcg

This section is provided strictly for arithmetic illustration and does not constitute dosing guidance.

Mathematical Calculation Tool

The calculator below allows mathematical concentration and volume calculations using variable vial strengths and reconstitution volumes. This tool is provided strictly for arithmetic reference.

Peptide Reconstitution Calculator

For Educational & Professional Reference Only

⚠️ This is a mathematical reference tool only. No medical or dosing advice is provided.

Safety & Contraindications (Summary)

Contraindications

Active malignancy
Pituitary tumors
Diabetic retinopathy
Pregnancy or breastfeeding

Drug Interactions

High glucose intake may blunt GH response
Glucocorticoids may reduce GH release

Adverse Events

Flushing
Headache
Dizziness
Tingling sensations
Transient increased hunger

Higher-Dose Risks

Water retention
Joint discomfort

Monitoring (Literature)

IGF-1 levels
Fasting glucose
Body composition changes
Clinical tolerability

Disclaimer

CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin are investigational peptides and are not FDA-approved for anti-aging or body composition purposes. This content is provided strictly as a pharmacologic and mathematical reference for educational and professional use. It does not constitute medical advice or prescribing guidance.

Reference Sources