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Concern · Injury & Tissue Repair
Tendon, ligament & soft-tissue recovery peptides.
BPC-157 and TB-500 are the two most-studied peptides in the tissue-repair category. Published animal and in-vitro research points to accelerated healing of tendons, ligaments, muscle and gut lining through distinct but complementary mechanisms.
BPC-157 listings
Multiple partner brands available — choose by origin, purity and price.
TB-500 listings
Thymosin Beta-4 fragment — systemic repair signalling.
Why this concern
BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound 157) is a synthetic pentadecapeptide derived from a protective sequence in human gastric juice. Published preclinical work reports accelerated tendon-to-bone healing, ligament repair, gut-lining protection and upregulation of VEGFR2-mediated angiogenesis. Read the full BPC-157 guide →
TB-500 is a synthetic fragment of Thymosin Beta-4 centred on the actin-binding LKKTET motif. The literature describes actin sequestration, cell migration, angiogenesis and systemic repair signalling — making it complementary to BPC-157 in many research protocols. Read the full TB-500 guide →
Both are strictly for in-vitro research and laboratory use. Dosing ranges, storage and safety notes are covered in the guides linked above.
Research Blog
Learn before you buy
Mechanism, literature dosing ranges and storage — research-grade summaries.
Peptide Guide
BPC-157: The Complete Research Guide
How Body Protection Compound-157 drives gut and tendon repair across multiple pathways.
Read guide →Peptide Guide
TB-500: Thymosin Beta-4 Fragment Research Overview
Actin sequestration, angiogenesis and systemic repair — what the literature reports.
Read guide →Foundations
What Are Peptides? A Plain-English Introduction
New to research peptides? Start here — what they are, why researchers care.
Read guide →For in vitro research and laboratory use only. Not for human or veterinary consumption. Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. All content is educational and does not constitute medical advice.









