The honest problem
You’re not overtrained. You’re under-recovered. There’s a difference. Your program is fine, your nutrition is decent, your sleep is “enough.” But the gap between sessions keeps growing. What used to take 24 hours now takes 48. Soreness lingers. Injuries that should heal in weeks take months.
Recovery isn’t just rest. It’s a biological process — tissue repair, inflammation clearance, hormone cycling. When growth hormone declines and inflammatory markers creep up, recovery slows regardless of how many rest days you take or how much protein you eat.
How peptides help
Sermorelin restores GH pulses during sleep — the primary recovery window. GHK-Cu activates tissue remodeling and collagen synthesis. Together they address the biological bottleneck, not just the symptoms. Your clinician tracks recovery markers across lab panels.
This works for
- Slow recovery between training sessions
- Lingering soreness lasting 3+ days
- Soft-tissue injuries that won’t fully heal
- Active adults over 35 with declining recovery capacity
- Manual laborers whose bodies can’t keep up with demand
This doesn’t work for
- Acute injuries requiring medical intervention
- Recovery issues caused by overtraining (reduce volume first)
- Sleep deprivation — no peptide replaces 7+ hours
- Nutritional deficiencies (protein, hydration, micronutrients)
Concrete finisher, 39, Las Vegas
“Pours and finishes concrete six days a week. By Thursday, his forearms are locked up and his lower back is on fire. He’d been managing with ibuprofen and a massage gun. A buddy told him about BPC-157 — but he wanted it prescribed, not from a vial with no label. Labs showed elevated CRP and low-normal IGF-1. His clinician built a recovery protocol. Eight weeks in, Thursday feels like Tuesday used to.”
Names and details changed. Not a testimonial — a composite profile based on the demographic this goal serves. Individual results depend on lab values and clinician evaluation.
Ready to start?
Five-minute intake. Your clinician builds your protocol from your labs.