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  • What Is Janoshik Testing — and Why Peptide Buyers Keep Searching for It

    Spend ten minutes in any peptide forum and you’ll see the same word used like a litmus test: Janoshik. Someone posts a vendor, and the first reply is “got a Janoshik?” If the answer is no, the conversation usually ends there. It’s a strange thing for a European analytical lab to become a trust password…

  • How to Choose a Canadian Peptide Supplier in 2026 (Without Getting Burned)

    Type “buy peptides Canada” into Google and you’ll get a wall of vendors that all look roughly the same: clean websites, confident copy, five-star reviews, a vial photo, a “research use only” disclaimer. They cannot all be equally good. Most of the real difference is invisible from the homepage, which is exactly the problem. This…

  • Are Peptides Legal in 2026? The FDA Just Reshuffled the List — and the Canada Answer Surprises People

    For about a week in 2026, peptide Twitter acted like the war was over. The story, roughly: the FDA was bringing peptides “back,” the bad old days of the do-not-compound list were ending, and everyone could relax. Screenshots flew. Victory laps were taken. The reality is more interesting than the celebration, and if you’re in…

  • Huberman’s New 3-Hour Peptide Episode: We Listened So You Don’t Have To

    The episode opens with a phrase that tells you exactly where 2026 is at. Dr. Abud Bakri, the internal-medicine doctor sitting across from Andrew Huberman, describes what he calls “the celebrity protocol”: people stacking a GLP-1 drug for appetite, a growth-hormone peptide for muscle, and a hormone modulator on top, all at once. “You’re seeing…

  • Peptide Reconstitution Guide: The Step-by-Step Research Protocol

    Lyophilized peptide on its own is just powder. Useful for storage, useless for any actual research protocol until you put it back into solution. Reconstitution is the procedural step that turns a vial of dry compound into a working research solution at a known concentration. The procedure is not complicated, but the details matter. Wrong…

  • Peptides for Weight Loss: What the Research Actually Shows (2026)

    There are two completely different things people mean when they type “peptides for weight loss” into a search bar, and the gap between them is the reason this topic is so confusing. One is collagen peptides: the hydrolyzed protein powder in the tub next to the whey at the supplement store. Those do almost nothing…

  • Peptides for Muscle Growth: The Research Landscape (2026)

    If you’ve been on fitness TikTok, listened to a Joe Rogan episode in the last two years, or scrolled through bodybuilding Reddit, you’ve heard the word peptides. Usually next to a claim about muscle growth, recovery, or “doing what steroids do without the side effects.” Most of that is marketing. Some of it points at…

  • BPC-157 vs TB-500: What Each One Actually Does

    You probably heard about BPC-157 and TB-500 the same way most people did. A podcast — Joe Rogan, Huberman Lab, the Diary of a CEO episode with Dr. Alex Tatem. Or because the FDA pulled both compounds off the compounding pharmacy list in 2023. Or because someone at your gym mentioned the “Wolverine stack.” They…

  • Diary of a CEO Peptides: Every Compound Dr. Tatem Discussed

    Plain-English breakdown of every peptide Dr. Alex Tatem named on Diary of a CEO – BPC-157, TB-500, Epitalon, and more. Research use only.

  • Semaglutide vs Tirzepatide vs Retatrutide: What the Research Actually Shows

    A mechanistic and trial-data comparison of semaglutide (GLP-1R), tirzepatide (GLP-1R/GIPR), and retatrutide (GLP-1R/GIPR/GCGR) — covering STEP, SURMOUNT, SURPASS-2, and Phase 2 retatrutide data.

  • CJC-1295 + Ipamorelin: Why Research Protocols Stack Them

    CJC-1295 (no DAC) activates GHRH receptors on pituitary somatotrophs; Ipamorelin suppresses somatostatin via GHS-R1a. Together they drive a discrete, amplified GH pulse that neither compound produces alone.

  • TB-500: Actin Regulation, Tissue Repair, and the Research Evidence

    TB-500 is a synthetic 17-amino-acid fragment of thymosin beta-4, studied for its role in actin sequestration, angiogenesis, and tissue repair. A research-focused review of the mechanism, animal model evidence, and human data.