BPC-157 + TB-500 + Thymosin Beta-4 — the expanded tissue-repair combination for post-surgical and chronic-injury research.
The Injury Rehabilitation Stack is the expanded version of the Wolverine Stack, adding Thymosin Beta-4 (the parent peptide TB-500 is derived from) for a broader cellular-migration and anti-inflammatory signal. It is researched for post-surgical recovery, chronic tendinopathy, and injuries that have not responded to conventional rehab.
The mechanisms are complementary: BPC-157 for local repair, TB-500 for systemic cellular migration, Thymosin Beta-4 for broader actin-regulatory and anti-inflammatory activity. All three are research-only in the US.
Every injury has structural, biomechanical, and rehab components that peptides do not address. A physical therapist, sports-medicine physician, or surgeon is the primary care path — peptides are adjunctive research at best.
BPC-157 handles local angiogenesis and tissue repair. TB-500 (thymosin beta-4 fragment) provides actin remodeling and cell migration. Thymosin Beta-4 (the full parent peptide) adds broader anti-inflammatory, anti-fibrotic, and stem-cell recruitment signals beyond what the TB-500 fragment alone provides. Together they cover local repair, systemic migration, and anti-inflammatory/anti-fibrotic activity.
When running a stack like this, these biomarkers let users see how the compounds perform in context. Trended across draws, they reveal whether the stack is actually moving the markers it should — or producing unintended shifts that warrant a provider conversation.
Cycles for acute injuries run 6–12 weeks in community reports. Chronic injuries may warrant longer, under provider oversight.
A sports-medicine physician or PT should be primary. Peptides are adjunctive research — they do not replace structural rehabilitation, biomechanical correction, or surgical evaluation when indicated.
Log every compound in the stack, upload your lab PDFs, and chart the biomarkers on this page across every draw. StackAI reads the panel in context of what you’re running.
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