Medical Disclaimer

By using this site you agree to this disclaimer and to our Terms of Service. If you do not agree with either, please don’t use the site.

Everything here is for information only. Nothing on this site is medical advice, and nothing here should be used to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any injury or illness. Reading this site does not create a doctor-patient relationship.

This is not a substitute for a doctor

Before making any medical decision — about an injury, a peptide, or any prescription medicine — talk to a licensed physician. A doctor can examine you and review your history. A website cannot.

This site is not a doctor, a clinic, a pharmacy, or a medical authority. It has no medical review board. It reports what published studies found and what people say in online communities, and it names the source of every claim in the sentence itself.

Emergencies

This site cannot help with a medical emergency. If you think you’re having one, call emergency services or go to the nearest emergency room. Do not wait, and do not look anything up here first.

Naming a compound is not a recommendation

A compound is covered here because people search for it around a specific sport or goal — not because it is recommended, and not because it works. In many cases no human study exists for the exact injury or use being researched. Where that’s true, the article says so.

Where the human evidence stops

For most recovery peptides covered here, no completed human study of a tendon, ligament, or pulley injury exists. The pattern repeats: a proposed mechanism, an animal study showing an effect in a rat, and no human trial of the actual injury. Published reviews of these compounds in sports medicine have reached the same conclusion — overwhelmingly animal and lab work, with almost no human data behind it.

Where that gap exists, the article covering the compound says so plainly and names its sources there. This page is the disclaimer, not the evidence; read the article.

What the evidence tiers mean

Compounds carry a letter grade for how strong the human evidence is. The grade is about one specific use — the same compound can carry a different tier on a different page, because the evidence depends on what it’s being used for.

  • Tier A — approved for this use. Regulators reviewed it and approved it for this exact condition.
  • Tier B — human data exists, for a different use. People have been studied on it, just not for the problem you’re researching.
  • Tier C — animal or lab studies, more than one research group. No human trial, but more than one lab found similar results.
  • Tier D — animal or lab studies, thin and single-source. Usually one research group, no human data for this use.
  • Tier E — human data, but skin only. Tested in people for topical use, not injection.

A tier is a description of the evidence, not a rating of safety, quality, or whether something is right for you. Tier A does not mean “recommended.” It means a regulator cleared it for one specific use, which may not be your use.

Studies and community reports are not the same thing

Different words are used for each, deliberately:

  • Studies found or showed something — a researcher tested it and published a result.
  • Users report or describe something — someone said it happened to them, in a forum or on social media.

A user report is an anecdote. It is not evidence that something works, it is not verified, and the people posting are anonymous. These reports are included because they’re what people actually encounter when researching, not because they carry weight.

No dosing instructions

This site does not give dosing, reconstitution, titration, or injection instructions, on any page. Questions about how much of anything to use belong with a licensed physician or pharmacist.

No sourcing guidance

This site does not tell you where to buy anything and does not rank or vouch for vendors. Many peptides discussed here are sold as “research use only” chemicals, which are not approved for human use and are not manufactured to the standards that apply to medicines. Legal status varies by country and changes.

Prices are estimates, not quotes

Prices on this site are estimated ranges captured on a stated date, not offers and not quotes. GLP-1 and peptide pricing changes by dose, by form, by pharmacy, by ZIP code and by month, and most routes run introductory offers that expire. A figure here may be wrong by the time you read it.

Every figure is an estimate. Prices vary by provider, dose, form, pharmacy and ZIP, and they change often. Confirm the current price with the provider before deciding anything. A dash in a price table means no figure was found for that pairing — not that it’s unavailable.

Sources and verification

Every claim names its source, listed at the bottom of the page. Each is checked against its PMID or DOI — the ID numbers used to look up a study. If a source can’t be verified, the claim is left out rather than published unverified. The site build fails rather than publish a citation that hasn’t been checked.

Community reports are attributed to the platform they came from. Links to individual posts are not published, because a wrong link is worse than a missing one.

Evidence changes

Medical and scientific understanding changes, and regulatory status changes with it. Claims here are kept accurate and sourced, but there is no guarantee that every statement reflects the newest research at the moment you read it. Pages carry a date; check it.

Some links on this site — to telehealth platforms or compounding pharmacies — are affiliate links, and this site may earn a commission if you use them. This does not change how evidence is graded or how prices are reported. Grades come from reading the research; prices come from the provider’s published figures. Nobody pays for placement, a tier, or a position in a price table.

Where an affiliate relationship exists, it is disclosed on the page carrying the link.

Links to other websites are provided for reference. This site does not control them, is not responsible for their content or accuracy, and linking to a site is not an endorsement of it or of anything it sells.

No warranty, and your use of this site

This site is provided “as is,” without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including any warranty of accuracy, completeness, fitness for a particular purpose, or non-infringement.

Using this site, and any decision you make based on it, is at your own risk. To the fullest extent permitted by law, neither this site nor anyone who writes for it is liable for any loss, injury, or damage arising from your use of it or from anything you read here.

See also our Terms of Service.