Jason Sypolt
Administrator
This is a garbled interpretation. Gonadorelin is bio-identical to GnRH. Natural men function by producing GnRH pulses for most of their lives. That, in effect, is extremely prolonged use. The kind of "prolonged use" you refer to as causing suppression is actually a continuous infusion of GnRH, rather then the intermittent pulses required by our bodies. This is just something described in research; it's not a treatment. It becomes a treatment intended to cause HPTA suppression when longer-lived GnRH analogs such as triptorelin are used. On the flip side, pulsed doses of gonadorelin are an approved treatment for male hypogonadism; they are proven to normalize the gonadotropins and testosterone. The need for an infusion pump is what limits its appeal. I have demonstrated that multiple daily manual injections of gonadorelin can function as a replacement for hCG, with other possible benefits. This will not be practical for most, but it absolutely works.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s fascinating. I have read the posts. It just isn’t practical in real world use. The pump would help with the dosing since no one is going to inject themselves every 2-3 hours. But there is the problem of cost developing one for this application and then cost to the patient. Right now most are better off getting Novarel/Pregnyl for a little over $100 in some areas.
What bothers me are the peptide sites and the clinics pushing this stuff as “HCG replacement”. No, it is not, and you also can’t prescribe kisspeptin to people. Very few I think are seeking to fill a need and instead are looking to recoup lost revenue (HCG) any way they can.