Is ipamorelin available by prescription?

If you’re looking for a prescription for a gh secretagogue, maybe you could doc shop and find one willing to write a scrip for Egrifta (tesamorelin). Since the drug is primarily intended for HIV patients with abnormal visceral fat accumulation, not sure how off use scrips work, especially with insurance.
 
Just because its not fda approved doesn't mean a dr cant prescribe it. Poor response
Yes, Ipamorelin can be prescribed by a doctor or advanced practitioner. It is commonly prescribed by medical professionals specializing in hormone replacement therapy, functional medicine, or age management for anti-aging, fat loss, and muscle growth purposes.
Therefore, to get CJC-1295 and ipamorelin that are fit for human use, you must go through a licensed clinician who will write you a prescription to be filled at an accredited compounding pharmacy.
 
Oh, I did not know this. Thanks.
If you’re looking for a prescription for a gh secretagogue, maybe you could doc shop and find one willing to write a scrip for Egrifta (tesamorelin). Since the drug is primarily intended for HIV patients with abnormal visceral fat accumulation, not sure how off use scrips work, especially with insurance.
Thanks! I was able to find a tesamorelin script but I won't mention where, because, ya know...
 
Just because its not fda approved doesn't mean a dr cant prescribe it. Poor response
Yes, Ipamorelin can be prescribed by a doctor or advanced practitioner. It is commonly prescribed by medical professionals specializing in hormone replacement therapy, functional medicine, or age management for anti-aging, fat loss, and muscle growth purposes.
Therefore, to get CJC-1295 and ipamorelin that are fit for human use, you must go through a licensed clinician who will write you a prescription to be filled at an accredited compounding pharmacy.
You are correct in the mechanism stated that would allow prescribing ipamorelin through a compounding pharmacy. I did read something that the FDA very recently closed that door? But maybe that changed again? Remember how tirz and sema were on again, off again through compounding pharmacies? Sure allowed those fine folks to score a bunch of panic sales!
 
Just because its not fda approved doesn't mean a dr cant prescribe it. Poor response
Yes, Ipamorelin can be prescribed by a doctor or advanced practitioner. It is commonly prescribed by medical professionals specializing in hormone replacement therapy, functional medicine, or age management for anti-aging, fat loss, and muscle growth purposes.
Therefore, to get CJC-1295 and ipamorelin that are fit for human use, you must go through a licensed clinician who will write you a prescription to be filled at an accredited compounding pharmacy.
It can be prescribed as long as it’s in category 1 eligible for compounding.
 
Just because its not fda approved doesn't mean a dr cant prescribe it. Poor response
ChatGPT led you wrong. There are hacks who will lie and say that they're connected to compounding pharmacies, and will happily sell you ipa for an insane markup in flagrant violation of federal law.

Long story short im going to a law enforcement academy and need to stay legal for a while. Anyone know where I can get a prescription for ipamorelin?
Absolutely ridiculous question. Continue using peptides and keep you mouth shut. There is no way that they would ever be tested for, no such test exists. Plenty of people in military and LE are running full blown steroids.
 
ChatGPT led you wrong. There are hacks who will lie and say that they're connected to compounding pharmacies, and will happily sell you ipa for an insane markup in flagrant violation of federal law.


Absolutely ridiculous question. Continue using peptides and keep you mouth shut. There is no way that they would ever be tested for, no such test exists. Plenty of people in military and LE are running full blown steroids.
You can test for ipamorelin. An athlete recently got banned for using it. Extremely doubtful law enforcement would specifically test for it though.
 
You can test for ipamorelin. An athlete recently got banned for using it. Extremely doubtful law enforcement would specifically test for it though.
You're right, too forward of me, obviously anti-doping tests would look for stuff like that. Law enforcement though? Not just doubtful, damn near impossible.
 
I was prescribed ipa/cjc by a functional medicine doctor via a compounding pharmacy. It's possible. The markup is obviously stupid. I would suggest getting a script from somewhere and then sourcing grey.
 
I was prescribed ipa/cjc by a functional medicine doctor via a compounding pharmacy. It's possible. The markup is obviously stupid. I would suggest getting a script from somewhere and then sourcing grey.
What's that now? Help me to make sense of this?

I would suggest getting a script from somewhere and then sourcing grey.
 
What's that now? Help me to make sense of this?

I would suggest getting a script from somewhere and then sourcing grey.

I mean he should have the doc write him a script for the ipamorelin but then, instead of paying a couple hundred a month to have a compounding pharmacy ship it to him already reconned in a refrigerated package, he should order it much cheaper using a grey market vendor. That way in the unlikely event their tests can even detect ipa and he gets flagged for it, he has a script, but he's not paying through the nose for the peps.
 
I was prescribed ipa/cjc by a functional medicine doctor via a compounding pharmacy. It's possible. The markup is obviously stupid. I would suggest getting a script from somewhere and then sourcing grey.
You were conned by someone paying fast and loose. CJC and ipa are both research chemicals. They can't be prescribed off label. They aren't merely unapproved; they are excluded entirely.

Edit: I was wrong. Apparently CJC and ipa were recently made unrestricted by Secretary kennedy's reclassification.
 
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You were conned by someone paying fast and loose. CJC and ipa are both research chemicals. They can't be prescribed off label. They aren't merely unapproved; they are excluded entirely.

i mean i literally have a copy of the script in my medical record, i just went back and double checked to make sure i wasn't confusing it with something else. it came in the mail from the same 503b pharmacy that i was initially getting my tirz from. yes, i'm sure they were playing fast and loose, but they gave it to me. and this doctor is not some fly by night operation, he's a department chair at a major regional hospital who makes money on the side selling compounded peps and TRT and whatnot straight to rich people who are tired of their insurance companies.

OP is saying he needs to have a script from a doctor in case it shows up on a test. i'm not arguing with you about whether it's legal to prescribe ipa or whether it's a good idea to go that route (it obviously isn't), i'm just saying if he wants to take ipa and is confident he won't get in trouble for it if he has a doctor's note, there is at least one doctor in the continental united states who will oblige him. in fact, if you want to bet on it, i'll put the o/u at 1.5 and bet the house on the over.
 
i mean i literally have a copy of the script in my medical record, i just went back and double checked to make sure i wasn't confusing it with something else.
Well I'm a monkey's uncle. What state was this in?

I'm not surprised that someone gave it to you, but I'm surprised it came from a compounding pharmacy with a script to match.

in fact, if you want to bet on it, i'll put the o/u at 1.5 and bet the house on the over.
I'm not that kind of American 😂
 
There is no such thing as a script for ipamorelin. Doesn't exist. One could theoretically get prescribed tesamorelin, but not ipa.
You were conned by someone paying fast and loose. CJC and ipa are both research chemicals. They can't be prescribed off label. They aren't merely unapproved; they are excluded entirely.
I was prescribed ipa/cjc by a functional medicine doctor via a compounding pharmacy. It's possible. The markup is obviously stupid. I would suggest getting a script from somewhere and then sourcing grey.
Everyone is kind of right in this conversation.


Neither ipamorelin nor CJC-1295 is FDA-approved to treat any disease, and there is no FDA-approved prescription product containing either compound in the United States. But they can however be prescribed.

FDA approval and whether a healthcare provider can prescribe/order a compounded medication are related but not the same thing.

I imagine there are def some licensed healthcare providers who do prescribe compounded preparations containing these peptides through compounding pharmacies. In everyday conversation, most people would call that a "prescription," even though it is a prescription for a compounded medication rather than an FDA-approved drug product with FDA-approved indications
 
Everyone is kind of right in this conversation.
I was definitely kind of wrong. It used to be true that CJC/Ipa could not be compounded, but secretary kennedy recently changed the classification on them along with 10 other popular peps, making them once again legal to compound.
 
I was definitely kind of wrong. It used to be true that CJC/Ipa could not be compounded, but secretary kennedy recently changed the classification on them along with 10 other popular peps, making them once again legal to compound.
Honestly I really do enjoy his non-interference stance to allowing people The right to choose how they treat themselves and his partiality towards peptides
 
Honestly I really do enjoy his non-interference stance to allowing people The right to choose how they treat themselves and his partiality towards peptides
I don't want him to bring it up at all. The mentioning of a thing by the government is a prelude to ruining that thing.

He never banned HFC or Red 40. I haven't seen him do a damn thing except give us what we already have.
 
It still confuses me that Doctors in the US are prepared to prescribe things without much if any human testing , let alone good quality evidence it works for the problem being treated. Or if prescribing it to well people is a good idea. If and when something goes wrong and a serious adverse event occurs they would not have a leg to stand on in court if sued , I cannot see how it would be medicolegally defensible?
 

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