Research Use Only. BPC/TB5 Blend is sold as a chemical reagent for in-vitro laboratory research. It is not a drug, supplement, or compounded preparation, and it is not for human or veterinary use. Wholesale Peptide Supply is not a pharmacy or compounding facility under 503A or 503B.
BPC/TB5 Blend
The BPC-157 + TB-500 blend combines two of the most researched structural and recovery peptides into a single research formulation, studied across structural, vascular, and epithelial models.
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Available Doses
Wholesale pricing for BPC/TB5 Blend is provided by quote based on dose and order volume. Tell us what you need and your account manager will send a personalized quote — typically within 10 minutes during business hours.
BPC/TB5 Blend 10/10mg
CAS 137525-51-0 / 77591-33-4 · Recovery & Structural
Request pricing for 10/10mgOverview
The BPC-157 + TB-500 blend combines two of the most researched structural and recovery peptides into a single research formulation, studied across structural, vascular, and epithelial models.
History
Combines two well-characterized recovery peptides for combined research models.
Key Areas of Research
- Tendon-to-bone, collagen, matrix
- Angiogenesis, nitric oxide, remodeling
- Migration, signaling, matrix
References
- Chang C-H. et al. (2011). BPC-157 in musculoskeletal injury models.
- Sikiric P. et al. (2018). Organ-protective effects of BPC-157.
Research Use Only
All products are intended solely for laboratory research purposes and are not for human or animal consumption. Must be handled by qualified professionals.
Related Compounds
Recovery & Structural
BPC-157
BPC-157 is a synthetic pentadecapeptide composed of 15 amino acids, originally derived from a naturally occurring protein fragment in gastric tissue. It has been studied extensively for its potential influence on molecular signaling, structural remodeling, and angiogenic processes.
View details →Recovery & Structural
TB-500
TB-500 is a synthetic peptide fragment derived from thymosin beta-4, studied for its influence on matrix remodeling, angiogenesis, and molecular migration.
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