New — Free Peptide Starter Guide (2026): 13 chapters, 34 cited studies

Get it free
ToolsCompareAlpha-GPC vs Thymagen

Alpha-GPC vs Thymagen

Side-by-side comparison of key properties, dosing, and research.

Cognitive Enhancement
Alpha-GPC
Immune Support
Thymagen
Summary
Alpha-GPC is the most bioavailable form of choline, readily crossing the blood-brain barrier to rapidly increase acetylcholine levels. It enhances cognitive performance, supports GH secretion, and is used as an essential complement to many nootropic peptides (especially those that increase acetylcholine demand like Noopept and Dihexa).
Thymagen is a dipeptide bioregulator (Glu-Asp) developed by Professor Vladimir Khavinson, tissue-specific for the thymus gland. It supports T-lymphocyte maturation, thymic function, and immune system normalization. As the thymus involutes with age (thymic atrophy), immune competence declines. Thymagen is used to support immune restoration, particularly in aging, post-illness recovery, and immunodeficiency states.
Half-Life
~4–6 hours
Short (minutes); sustained gene-regulatory effects
Admin Route
Oral, SubQ
SubQ, Oral
Research
Typical Dose
300–600 mg
10 mg per day
Frequency
1–2x daily
Daily for 10–30 days
Key Benefits
  • Rapidly raises brain acetylcholine levels
  • Enhances memory formation and recall
  • Prevents headaches from nootropic peptides (choline donor)
  • Stimulates growth hormone secretion (modest)
  • Improves attention and processing speed
  • Neuroprotective in Alzheimer's and cognitive decline
  • Approved in Europe for Alzheimer's therapy
  • Enhances power output in athletes (pre-workout)
  • Supports thymic epithelial cell function and T-cell maturation
  • May partially restore thymic output reduced by age-related atrophy
  • Normalizes T-lymphocyte subpopulation balance
  • Supports immune recovery after illness, surgery, or chemotherapy
  • Anti-aging effects on thymic tissue
  • Complementary to Thymosin Alpha-1 and Thymalin in immune protocols
  • May improve vaccine responsiveness in older individuals
Side Effects
  • Headache (paradoxically, from excess acetylcholine at very high doses)
  • Nausea at doses > 1200 mg
  • Dizziness
  • Fatigue at high doses
  • +1 more
  • Generally well tolerated
  • Mild injection site reactions
  • No significant immunological adverse events reported
Stacks With