Peptides Explained: BPC-157, TB-500 & CJC-1295 — Q&A
What do peptides like BPC-157 and TB-500 really do, who are they for, and how are they combined? Honest answers.
Peptides raise a lot of questions because the research literature sounds impressive. Here's the honest, conversational explanation — research context only.
What are peptides, really?
Short chains of amino acids acting as signalling molecules. Studied in research for tissue repair, growth-hormone release and metabolism. We supply strictly for laboratory and research use — see the peptide collection.
What does BPC-157 do?
BPC-157 is one of the best-studied recovery peptides in animal models: tendon, ligament and tissue repair and inflammation reduction. HPLC-tested, ≥99% pure, COA on request.
BPC-157 vs TB-500 — the difference?
Both in recovery research, different mechanisms: BPC-157 local/angiogenic, TB-500 systemic via cell migration. Together the well-known "Wolverine" combination in the literature.
What does CJC-1295 do?
CJC-1295 is a GHRH analogue that, in research, stimulates natural growth-hormone release, often studied with a GHRP for synergy on GH and IGF-1.
Who for, and how combined?
Research and laboratory applications. In the literature BPC-157 + TB-500 is the most-described recovery combination. Reconstitution with bacteriostatic water required.
Are they safe and pure?
BPC-157 is described as well tolerated in animal studies; human data limited — treat everything as a research compound. Every batch HPLC-tested to ≥99% with COA. Questions? Contact us.




