What people often ask
How is GHRP-6 different from Ipamorelin?
Same general mechanism (both activate the ghrelin receptor for GH release). GHRP-6 is older and less selective, it produces more intense appetite stimulation and notable cortisol and prolactin elevation. Ipamorelin was developed specifically to preserve GH-release activity while minimizing those side effects, which is why it's the preferred GHRP in most modern protocols.
Will it really make me hungry?
Yes, and quickly. The appetite effect is the most-noticed part of GHRP-6 use. If you're not interested in eating more, this is the wrong peptide.
Can it help with cachexia or unintended weight loss?
The appetite mechanism is theoretically aligned with that goal. Clinical use of GHRP-6 specifically for cachexia has been explored but is not an FDA-approved indication. Anyone with significant unintended weight loss or wasting should be working with a clinician for proper diagnosis and treatment.
Will it raise my cortisol?
Yes, more than GHRP-2 does and substantially more than Ipamorelin. The effect is dose-dependent. People with cortisol-related concerns (anxiety, sleep, weight pattern issues) should probably choose Ipamorelin instead.
Is it FDA-approved?
No. Not approved for any indication. On the FDA's Category 2 list as of September 2023, restricting compounding-pharmacy access.
How does it differ from GHRP-2?
Closer to each other than either is to Ipamorelin. GHRP-6 has a more pronounced appetite effect and somewhat larger cortisol/prolactin elevation than GHRP-2. GHRP-2 produces a slightly cleaner GH pulse with less appetite stimulation. Both are older-generation peptides displaced by Ipamorelin in modern protocols.
Why is it still used at all?
Three reasons: cost (often less expensive than Ipamorelin), the intentional appetite-stimulation use case, and habit in some long-running research-peptide protocols. For most adult longevity / body-composition goals, Ipamorelin is the more sensible starting point.