Reconstitution & dose calculator
When to stay put vs. adjust
Stay put at 20 mcg daily for the first week to assess tolerance, particularly for hypoglycemia. The first doses are when blood-sugar drops are most likely. Always inject post-workout or with a meal, never before bed and never while fasted — sleep-onset hypoglycemia from IGF-1 is the genuinely dangerous failure mode and has been associated with serious adverse events. Eat 30–50 g of fast-acting carbs (juice, glucose tabs, dextrose, white rice) within 30 minutes of every injection. If you feel light-headed, shaky, sweaty, or unusually hungry within an hour of dosing, that's hypoglycemia and you need carbs immediately.
Consider stepping to 30–40 mcg daily only after at least one week at 20 mcg with no hypoglycemic episodes and clear tolerability. The 30–60 mcg range is where most of the community's anecdotal benefit reports sit. Going higher doesn't reliably produce proportionally better results — IGF-1 receptors aren't a linear "more is better" target, and the cumulative-exposure concern grows with both dose and duration.
Don't go above 100 mcg daily, and even at 60–100 mcg, you're exiting the well-trodden community range. The cancer-biology concern scales with total IGF-1 exposure (dose × duration), and pushing both up simultaneously is the worst version of the trade-off.
Cycle off at 4–6 weeks regardless of progress. Long-term continuous use of LR3 isn't characterized for safety in healthy adults, and the cumulative-IGF-1-exposure question is where the cancer concern lives. An off-period at least equal to the on-period (so 4 weeks on / 4 weeks off, minimum) is the conservative default. Some research-community protocols use a much shorter window — 50 mcg/day for 10 days, then 4 weeks off — specifically to keep cumulative IGF-1 exposure low. That short-pulse pattern is the more conservative choice if you're worried about the cancer-biology angle.
Watch for hypoglycemia first, then edema, joint discomfort, and any unusual lumps or swelling. The acute risk is blood sugar; the chronic risk pattern includes fluid retention and the possibility of accelerating any pre-existing tissue growth. People with personal or strong family history of breast, prostate, or colorectal cancer should treat this as a meaningful contraindication rather than a footnote.
Site-injection localized hypertrophy is more myth than evidence. Bodybuilding protocols sometimes inject LR3 directly into specific muscles claiming targeted growth. Some local effect at the injection site is plausible, but a substantial portion of the dose enters systemic circulation regardless of injection location — you're getting whole-body IGF-1 elevation either way, just with an extra step.
The honest read. IGF-1 LR3's pharmacology is well-characterized and the anabolic biology in animals is real. Native IGF-1 (Increlex / mecasermin) is FDA-approved for severe pediatric IGF-1 deficiency, which validates the receptor pathway in defined clinical populations. None of that translates to healthy adults using LR3 for muscle growth without addressing the cancer-biology concern, which sustained pharmacological elevation of free, bioavailable IGF-1 specifically activates. This is one of the higher-stakes peptides on the site. Anyone treating it as functionally equivalent to a GH secretagogue stack (CJC/Ipa) is missing that the risk profiles are genuinely different.
For educational and research purposes only. This is not medical advice. IGF-1 LR3 is not FDA-approved. The cancer-biology concern is real and warrants particular caution in anyone with personal or family history of hormonally-influenced cancers. IGF-1 is on the WADA banned list. Hypoglycemia is an acute risk requiring carb intake around dosing. Consult a licensed healthcare provider before any health decision.