HCG
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Mechanism
HCG does not introduce testosterone. It speaks the language the testes already understand – mimicking the luteinizing hormone pulse that instructs Leydig cells to synthesize androgens from cholesterol. The distinction matters. Where exogenous testosterone replaces a signal, HCG preserves the conversation.
LH receptor binding activates adenylyl cyclase via Gs coupling, elevating intracellular cAMP and upregulating StAR protein expression. Cholesterol transport into the mitochondrial matrix is the rate-limiting step in androgen synthesis.
Leydig cell steroidogenesis proceeds sequentially through CYP11A1, CYP17A1, 3β-HSD, and 17β-HSD to produce testosterone. HCG sustains this entire enzymatic cascade during periods of HPG axis suppression.
Spermatogenesis depends on intratesticular testosterone concentrations 50 to 100 times higher than serum levels, a gradient only sustained LHR activation can maintain. Sertoli cell paracrine support proceeds in parallel and requires the same gonadal stimulus.
HCG acts downstream of the pituitary and does not restore hypothalamic GnRH pulsatility. It is a gonadal bridge, not a tool for axis rehabilitation.
What we observe
What people saw in fertility and testes
The outcomes below reflect patterns reported across clinical trials, observational cohorts, and endocrinological reviews. They describe what investigators have noted under studied conditions, not what any individual should expect. Aeterna does not prescribe, dispense, or sell; this summary exists to illuminate the evidence.
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Intratesticular Testosterone Maintenance
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Testicular Volume Preservation
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Spermatogenesis Support
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Serum Testosterone Elevation
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Cryptorchidism - Partial Response
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Luteal Phase Support in ART
Evidence
What the studies found
Three studies are presented here as representative entries in a larger literature spanning reproductive endocrinology, andrology, and sports medicine. Each is cited with its primary finding and a representative statistic. Readers are encouraged to consult primary sources directly.
Intratesticular Testosterone Concentrations in Men Receiving Testosterone Replacement with and without HCG Co-administration
Randomized controlled study in eugonadal men receiving exogenous testosterone enanthate with or without adjunctive HCG (125 IU every other day). The HCG group maintained intratesticular testosterone concentrations within 25% of baseline, while the testosterone-only group experienced a decline exceeding 90% from baseline values. Serum testosterone was comparable between groups, underscoring that serum measurements do not reflect intratesticular milieu.
Gonadotropin Therapy for Induction of Spermatogenesis in Men with Hypogonadotropic Hypogonadism: A Systematic Review
Systematic review of 30 studies encompassing 1,042 men with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism treated with HCG alone or in combination with FSH. Spermatogenesis was achieved in 76% of subjects overall; combination therapy with FSH produced higher sperm concentrations and shorter time to first sperm appearance. Prior testosterone therapy did not significantly impair response when gonadotropin treatment was initiated.
Low-Dose HCG Preserves Testicular Volume and Sperm Parameters During Testosterone Replacement Therapy: A Prospective Cohort Study
Prospective 24-week cohort study in 68 hypogonadal men initiating testosterone replacement therapy. Subjects receiving adjunctive HCG (250 IU three times weekly) demonstrated preservation of mean testicular volume within 8% of baseline, compared to a 21% reduction in the testosterone-only cohort. Sperm concentration remained detectable in 89% of the HCG group versus 34% of controls at week 24.
From lyophilized powder to a usable solution.
Peptide
5000 IU lyophilized powder
Diluent
2.0 mL bacteriostatic water
Final concentration
2,500 IU/mL
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Prepare the vial
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Draw the diluent
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Add slowly
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Prepare the vial
Note
Dosing rythm
A patient titration
Schedule below mirrors the peptidedosages.com educational protocol (typical daily range: 500 IU subcutaneous, 3× weekly (Mon/Wed/Fri) for testicular maintenance during TRT).
Storage, caution, contradiction
Storage
Cold, dark, undisturbed
- Lyophilized: refrigerate at 2–8 °C (35.6–46.4 °F).
- After reconstitution, refrigerate at 2–8 °C (35.6–46.4 °F) for up to 60 days.
- Do not freeze reconstituted solution; freezing degrades the glycoprotein structure and reduces biological activity.
- Allow refrigerated solution to reach room temperature for 5–10 minutes before injection to reduce injection discomfort.
- Inspect reconstituted solution for particulate matter or discoloration before each use; discard if either is present.
Side effects
What members describe
- Injection site reactions - erythema, mild swelling, and transient discomfort are the most commonly reported local effects.
- Gynecomastia - HCG stimulates testicular aromatase activity, increasing conversion of testosterone to estradiol; estrogen-sensitive individuals may require monitoring and adjunctive aromatase inhibitor consideration.
- Ovarian Hyperstimulation Syndrome (OHSS) - in female ART protocols, HCG trigger carries a risk of OHSS ranging from mild to severe; risk stratification and luteal phase management are standard practice.
- Headache, fatigue, and mood variability have been reported, particularly at higher doses; these effects are generally transient and dose-dependent.
- Fluid retention and edema may occur secondary to elevated estradiol; monitoring of electrolytes and blood pressure is prudent in longer protocols.
Contradictions
Reasons to abstain
- Known or suspected androgen-sensitive malignancy (prostate carcinoma, testicular carcinoma) - HCG stimulates endogenous testosterone production and is contraindicated in these settings.
- Precocious puberty - HCG administration in children with premature activation of the HPG axis may accelerate bone age advancement and compromise adult stature.
- Primary hypogonadism (hypergonadotropic) - absent or severely diminished Leydig cell reserve renders HCG ineffective; the signal cannot be received where the receptor apparatus is absent.
- Uncontrolled thyroid or adrenal dysfunction - steroidogenic pathways share substrate and cofactor pools; systemic endocrine instability should be addressed before gonadotropin therapy is initiated.
- Hypersensitivity to HCG or any excipient in the formulation - anaphylactic reactions, though rare, have been reported; prior allergic response to gonadotropin preparations is a contraindication.
Synergies
What to pair with HCG
HCG rarely operates in isolation within clinical protocols. Its role as a downstream LH signal makes it a natural complement to agents that act at the hypothalamic or pituitary level, or to exogenous androgens that suppress the axis it is meant to sustain. The pairings below reflect patterns in the clinical and research literature – not protocol recommendations.
FAQ
Your questions, patiently answered
No. HCG does not contain testosterone and does not directly introduce androgens into the body. It stimulates the Leydig cells of the testes to produce testosterone endogenously – a meaningful distinction. The signal and the hormone it produces are separate entities, with different pharmacokinetics, receptor profiles, and regulatory statuses.
Exogenous testosterone suppresses the hypothalamic-pituitary axis, reducing LH to near-undetectable levels. Without LH stimulation, Leydig cells become quiescent, intratesticular testosterone falls dramatically, and testicular volume declines. HCG replaces the absent LH signal, maintaining Leydig cell activity and preserving the testicular environment – including spermatogenesis – that testosterone monotherapy would otherwise compromise.
Not in the conventional sense. HCG acts downstream of the pituitary, bypassing rather than rehabilitating the hypothalamic-pituitary axis. It sustains testicular function without restoring the endogenous signaling cascade. Agents that act at the hypothalamic level – such as clomiphene or GnRH analogues – are used when axis restoration, rather than downstream stimulation, is the clinical objective.
Yes. By stimulating testosterone production, HCG also increases substrate available for aromatization. Leydig cells themselves express aromatase, and HCG upregulates this activity. Elevated estradiol can produce gynecomastia, fluid retention, and mood changes in susceptible individuals. Monitoring estradiol during HCG protocols is standard practice in the clinical literature.
Both bind the LH receptor, but HCG has a substantially longer half-life – approximately 36 hours versus 60 minutes for endogenous LH – due to its additional sialic acid residues on the beta subunit. This extended receptor occupancy produces a more sustained steroidogenic stimulus, which is pharmacologically useful but also means that the signal is less pulsatile than physiological LH. Whether tonic versus pulsatile LH stimulation has meaningful long-term consequences for Leydig cell health remains an open question in the literature.
Yes. HCG is prohibited in male athletes by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) at all times, both in and out of competition. It is detectable in urine via immunoassay and confirmatory mass spectrometry. The prohibition reflects its capacity to stimulate endogenous testosterone production, which would otherwise be indistinguishable from natural testosterone in standard T/E ratio testing. This is a regulatory and ethical matter; the pharmacology is neutral on the question.
In the same family
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