About Peptide Atlas
Most peptide information is either sales copy or research papers no normal person can read. We sit in the middle: we read the actual studies and explain them straight, so you can tell real evidence from hype.
How we write these pages
For every compound, we pull the research from PubMed and work through it: what it's used for, what the benefits and side effects really are, the doses researchers actually used, and how it works. Every claim links back to the studies behind it, so you can check our work.
Evidence, graded honestly
We label each compound by how strong its proof is: clinical evidence (human trials or an approved medicine), some human data (small or early studies), or animal & lab only (not yet tested in people). A big claim needs strong data — and we tell you when it doesn't have any.
This is not medical advice
Everything here is educational. It is not a prescription, a recommendation to use anything, or a substitute for a doctor. Any doses we mention describe what studies used — not what you should take. Talk to a qualified clinician before starting anything, especially if you take medications or have a health condition.
Products and the law vary
Approved medicines and unregulated “research” products are not the same thing — quality, purity, and labeling can differ wildly. Legal status also depends on where you are and what the product is. We don't sell anything and we don't point you to vendors.