Oral peptides

peptides are very fragile and do not survive digestion. just go with insulin needles if you want to go down this route. they are dead ez. otherwise, forget about it.
 
BPC 157 arginate salt gets into the system and is resistant to gastric transit
sure... bpc 157 is like the only oral thing and even then it's not been verified to work for the intended purpose of accelerated healing. not only is the 'science' not really there. finding a decent source for oral bpc is probably even harder. just go the injectable route imo.
 
sure... bpc 157 is like the only oral thing and even then it's not been verified to work for the intended purpose of accelerated healing. not only is the 'science' not really there. finding a decent source for oral bpc is probably even harder. just go the injectable route imo.
"Verified to work for the intended purpose of accelerated healing"

Many peptides lie in this category yet are widely used with substantial anecdotal and increasing scientific success. Such is the world of Grey market peptides.

Each has its own job. In the example of BPC157 specifically the mode of transport does matter as shown below.

  • Oral (Arginate): Systemic absorption is actually quite low, but it acts like a topical patch for the GI tract. It coats the stomach and intestines, interacting directly with local tissue. If the goal is strictly gut healing, oral is the logical tool.
  • Injection (Subcutaneous): Bypasses the GI tract entirely to achieve higher systemic levels in the bloodstream, which is why people prefer it for systemic issues like tendon, ligament, or joint repair.


As far as sourcing well, peptides being peptides, ill say to the OP, check out growth guys from my own looking around in the past.

Pretty sure its fair game here to say that, If not. Please pardon me mods and edit my infraction. Ive had others answer similar here to me with regards to peps and figured it was OK.


I do agree however, I prefer the subq method myself as well.
 
Injecting is not as scary as you think - very tiny thin insulin needles 30ga 5/16" long .3ml syringe -I had my worries as I never did it until 2 weeks ago - now I'm completely comfortable with it - 9/10 times you don't even feel it as long as you push the needle in slow....no welts or scars ....a lot less scary than I though. It's all subq - you don't inject into the muscle - just into the fatty layer below the skin.

Not even 2 weeks into my journey - and I've already injected 29 times.

So glad I did my research - making a big difference already just 2 weeks in !! I did this not because it's the "in thing to do" but because I needed some relief from the constant fatigue and pain from the arthritis I'm experiencing. I'm older than most on this forum. Everyone has their reasons.
 
Why not just inject?
I do inject. I was looking at some of the stuff they sell on lvlup Health and they look interesting. I was just thinking it would be nice to take a break from pinning myself all the time and take something oral.
 
I do inject. I was looking at some of the stuff they sell on lvlup Health and they look interesting. I was just thinking it would be nice to take a break from pinning myself all the time and take something oral.
Yea - I get it - completely understand. All good. I have seen some oral 157's on a few websites - but I believe they target mostly gastrointestinal stuff - I was considering the pills to till I read how much more effective the injections are - but maybe gastro is your target.
 
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