Epithalamin vs Cagrilintide

A detailed comparison to help you understand the differences and choose the right peptide for your research goals.

Epithalamin

Epithalamin is a natural peptide extract from the pineal gland. It is the precursor compound from which the synthetic Epitalon was derived. Known for anti-aging and telomerase-activating properties.

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Cagrilintide

Cagrilintide is a long-acting amylin analog in development, showing promising results when combined with semaglutide (CagriSema). Amylin is a hormone co-secreted with insulin that promotes satiety.

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Side-by-Side Comparison

AspectEpithalaminCagrilintide
MechanismSimilar to Epitalon, it stimulates telomerase production and may help maintain telomere length. Also regulates melatonin synthesis and circadian rhythms.Activates amylin receptors (calcitonin receptor with RAMP proteins) to slow gastric emptying, suppress glucagon secretion, and reduce food intake through central satiety mechanisms distinct from GLP-1.
Typical DosageResearch dosing: 10-20mg daily for 10-20 day cycles. Often administered 1-3 times per year in long-term protocols.Clinical trials: 2.4mg weekly as monotherapy or in combination with semaglutide 2.4mg (CagriSema). Optimal dosing still being determined.
AdministrationIntramuscular or subcutaneous injection. Natural extract may have more variable composition than synthetic Epitalon.Subcutaneous injection once weekly. Currently only available in clinical trials - not yet FDA approved.
Side EffectsGenerally well-tolerated. May affect sleep patterns. Less characterized than synthetic Epitalon.Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation similar to other incretin-based therapies. Combination with semaglutide may increase GI effects initially.
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Key Differences

Unique to Epithalamin:

Unique to Cagrilintide:

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