More Good Days
Peptides 101: Medicine vs Experimental vs Hype Peptides are one of the most misunderstood topics in modern health. Some are life-saving medicines used every day. Some are promising but still being studied. And some are pure marketing hype moving faster than the science. In this episode, we break it down clearly and simply—so you can think like a scientist, not a salesman. What are peptides (simple)? Think of your body like a communication system: Amino acids = letters Peptides = words Proteins = sentences Peptides are signaling molecules that tell your body what to do: Release insulin Reduce appetite Repair tissue Stimulate growth hormone Control inflammation They are signals—not shortcuts. Why peptides are powerful Highly targeted Extremely precise Mimic natural biology But they are also: Fragile Often injectable Difficult to manufacture safely A key risk most people ignore: contamination Poorly made peptides may contain endotoxins that trigger immune and inflammatory responses. 🧠 The 4 tiers of peptides 1. Medicine (Proven) Backed by large human trials, regulated, prescribed Examples: GLP-1 drugs (semaglutide, tirzepatide), insulin → Reduce appetite, improve insulin signaling, slow digestion → Rapid weight loss may include muscle loss without proper training + protein → Often require long-term use under medical supervision 2. Clinical (Limited Data) Used by specialists, not fully mainstream Examples: Tesamorelin, CJC-1295, Ipamorelin → Work via growth hormone pathways → Sleep remains the most important natural driver 3. Experimental Limited human data, unknown long-term safety Examples: BPC-157, TB-500, GHK-Cu, MOTS-c → Studied for repair, inflammation, metabolism 4. Hype Where most people get misled Examples: Melanotan II, Follistatin, AOD-9604 🚩 Red flags: oral peptides, influencer stacks, exaggerated claims 🚫 The biggest mistake Shortcut thinking. Peptides don’t replace: Training Sleep Nutrition They amplify biology—they don’t fix it. Think like a scientist Before using any peptide, ask: Is it medically approved? Are there large human trials? Is dosing standardized? Is long-term safety known? Is a qualified doctor involved? If not—proceed with caution.
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