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Epithalamin vs Liraglutide

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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Liraglutide

Liraglutide is a GLP-1 receptor agonist — a 31-amino acid peptide analog with 97% homology to native human GLP-1. FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes (Victoza, 2010) and chronic weight management (Saxenda, 2014). It was the first GLP-1 agonist approved specifically for obesity. Liraglutide has a shorter half-life than semaglutide (13 hours vs 7 days), requiring daily rather than weekly dosing.

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Side-by-Side Comparison

AspectEpithalaminLiraglutide
MechanismSimilar to Epitalon, it stimulates telomerase production and may help maintain telomere length. Also regulates melatonin synthesis and circadian rhythms.Liraglutide binds to the GLP-1 receptor, activating the same pathways as native GLP-1: glucose-dependent insulin secretion, glucagon suppression, delayed gastric emptying, and central appetite suppression. A C-16 fatty acid (palmitic acid) attached to Lys26 via a glutamic acid spacer enables albumin binding, extending the half-life from ~2 minutes (native GLP-1) to ~13 hours. Less potent albumin binding and shorter half-life compared to semaglutide necessitates once-daily dosing.
Typical DosageResearch dosing: 10-20mg daily for 10-20 day cycles. Often administered 1-3 times per year in long-term protocols.For weight management (Saxenda): start at 0.6 mg daily for 1 week. Increase by 0.6 mg weekly until reaching 3.0 mg daily maintenance dose. For type 2 diabetes (Victoza): start at 0.6 mg daily for 1 week, increase to 1.2 mg. May increase to 1.8 mg if additional glycemic control is needed.
AdministrationIntramuscular or subcutaneous injection. Natural extract may have more variable composition than synthetic Epitalon.Subcutaneous injection in the abdomen, thigh, or upper arm. Rotate injection sites. Administer once daily at any time, independent of meals. Store pens refrigerated before first use; after first use, store at room temperature or refrigerated for up to 30 days.
Side EffectsGenerally well-tolerated. May affect sleep patterns. Less characterized than synthetic Epitalon.Very common (>10%): nausea (up to 40%), diarrhea, constipation, vomiting, decreased appetite, dyspepsia, abdominal pain. Higher rate of daily GI symptoms compared to weekly GLP-1s due to daily dosing peaks. Common (1-10%): headache, dizziness, fatigue, injection site reactions, increased heart rate.
Best For

Key Differences

Unique to Epithalamin:

Unique to Liraglutide:

Detailed Analysis

Commonalities

Epithalamin and Liraglutide are used for different purposes and have limited overlap in their applications.

Which Should You Choose?

Choose Epithalamin for Sleep Quality. Choose Liraglutide for Fat Loss.

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