A peptide first studied for gut healing now widely used for soft-tissue repair.
BPC-157 is one of the most studied recovery peptides in current use. It was originally derived from a protein found in gastric juice and first researched for gut healing. The research and clinical experience since has shown it supports soft-tissue repair across joints, tendons, and ligaments.
Who tends to benefit. Clients with slow-healing tendon and ligament discomfort from training. Anyone recovering from surgery, with surgeon's awareness. Clients with chronic gut inflammation as part of a broader gastrointestinal protocol. Some clients with persistent joint stiffness that has not responded to conventional approaches.
How it is delivered. BPC-157 is most commonly run as a four to six week course of daily subcutaneous injections via a medical-grade prefilled pen. The dose is small and the injection is shallow, similar in size and technique to insulin delivery. We provide full training before you start and check in across the course.
What clients report. The most consistent feedback is reduced inflammation in a specific area, faster return to training, and better tolerance of high-load activity. Less consistent but reported, improved gut comfort for those running it alongside dietary changes.
What we screen for. As with any peptide, we run baseline blood work, review your medical history, and discuss medications. BPC-157 is generally well tolerated but is not appropriate for everyone, particularly clients with active cancer, certain autoimmune presentations, or pregnancy.
It is also not magic. Peptides are tools within a broader recovery framework that includes sleep, training load management, nutrition, and conventional medical care. We treat BPC-157 as an accelerator, not a substitute, and we say so at consultation.
A typical course at Ivory runs eight to twelve weeks and is reviewed at the midpoint. If the course is not delivering measurable change, we stop and reassess. We do not extend protocols indefinitely without a clear reason.