02XXCA Posted July 3 Share Posted July 3 (edited) Edited July 3 by 02XXCA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted July 4 Share Posted July 4 We're really just discovering some of the power of endogenous peptides, partly thanks to AI modeling. It's something that's accelerating literally right this moment. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted July 5 Share Posted July 5 Since I don't see ads, or live TV, or social media shit, I had no idea how much this is being talked about in all of those. Last night in a neighborhood group, people had questions. Some of them know I've been involved with a few peptides for a long time, and I've shared a lot of my research with them. So between that and the general buzz, there's a shitload of interest. So I'm becoming my own pharmacist, and also for others. I don't think Dave intended to inspired that, but you did man. Order one of several to come. Also I don't think I've ever mentioned that I've totally cured Moriah's very terrible peri-menopause symptoms. Gone. With a pair of cheap and very well recognized as safe peptides, zero side effects. The info is freely available. 20g Raw powder GHK-Cu 10g, $20 x 2 = $40 BPC157/TB500 mix, 2 kits = $200 Tesamorelin 10mg kit = $165 Tirzepatide 40mg kit = $650 4 Lyophilized GHK-Cu, 50mg kit x 4 = $120 ship55 total1230usd Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted July 7 Share Posted July 7 I guess it’s fully mainstream if you can buy it at Target? This is new, and part of their partnership with Ulta. But never expected copper peptides to be THIS mainstream. This is properly known as GHK-Cu. I have a shitload of it coming for a fraction of the price. I know two people who have/had businesses making skin products. We can do it better than Target/Ulta. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted July 11 Share Posted July 11 In a neighborhood conversation last night, I learned that "peptide" is a new buzzword in MSM/social media, and that everyone thinks they were just invented. Nobody seems to know that old and super-common things like hyaluronic acid and collagen are peptides and proteins. Or that a peptide is just a protein fragment. And that they are just an amino chain that's too short to be a protein. Everyone thinks they are "chemicals" and "artificial." Apparently Olay did a 16 page ad in Vogue to spread the word on their Peptide24 collagen/B3/HA blend. Which I use, and love. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted July 12 Share Posted July 12 My recent research has been around GHK-Cu, which is very well proven to repair a variety of bodily tissues. ÏAbove, it's sold as a topical skin repair. It's also been well studied for increased healing in open wounds. Injection leads to soft tissue repair in the body. It has an extremely low risk profile and very high benefit profile. Today I'm going down the path of using it nasally, to affect the brain. Mouse testing, there aren’t any great human studies that are peer reviewed yet. GHK-Cu fights cognitive decline https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10680828/ This studies the general relationship between recovering from physical stress and the fact that age-related diseases are associated with the same pathways. Meaning that because it can fix damage to the body when injected, and fix skin topically, can it help the brain by being taken nasally? (Nasal is the most reliable way to cross the blood-brain barrier.) Bottom line; mice were able to navigate mazes and complete tasks faster and better with this peptide, particularly male mice. Empirical testing of the brain tissue shows notable improvements. ***** The neuropathology data supported the cognitive test results. Inflammation is a hallmark pathway of aging and is increasingly present in the brains of C57BL/6 mice [32]. The brains from mice treated with intranasal GHK-Cu showed a decrease in MCP-1, a marker used to indicate inflammation [33]. Interestingly, the decrease in staining intensity was more pronounced in the brains from female mice than male mice, even though the peptide showed a more effective increase in resilience to cognitive decline in males. The lack of significant differences in staining intensity for IBA-1, a marker for microglia, was somewhat surprising. Microglia are resident immune cells in the brain and are generally increased with increasing age as the result of neuronal insults and damage [34]. Brains from male mice but not female mice, treated with intranasal GHK-Cu, only showed a decreased trend for the presence of microglia, suggesting microglia are not a robust target for GHK-Cu at least under the experimental conditions of this study. The third IHC neuropathology antibody marker used in this study showed an increased staining intensity for neurofilament light chain (NFL-1) as an indicator of axonal damage [35]. Clearly, the brains from both male and female mice treated with intranasal GHK-Cu showed decreased staining intensity for NFL-1 suggesting that axonal damage is associated with brain aging that can be attenuated with GHK-Cu treatment. Although the mechanism for this effect was not investigated, it could be speculated that GHK-Cu might be triggering a wound healing effect similar to that occurring in damaged skin [13]. Overall, these neuropathology observations suggest that GHK-Cu acts on molecular markers associated with different pathways in the brain in a sex dependent manner, and that additional drugs could be added as a cocktail to be more effective in enhancing resilience to age-related cognitive decline. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
02XXCA Posted August 13 Author Share Posted August 13 Another great video: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted August 13 Share Posted August 13 Well, the headline has a probable lie or at least purposely misleading line, so...can it be good? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted August 15 Share Posted August 15 Ok Chris, you were wrong, this isn't just great. It may be the best peptide video I've ever seen. The clickbait title and bullshit first few minutes are just a consequence of what it takes to get views. It's super packed with info, everyone should hear it, and I've passed it along a lot. I'm gonna stop doubting you when you recommend a video, even if the clickbait parts annoy me. I was wrong. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted August 16 Share Posted August 16 Now that I'm becoming a pharmacist, I'm interested in some specific numbers for ultra-low-dose GLP-1s, and she's a huge proponent of that. And refuses to even touch lightly on the amounts. 25mcg? Or what? The videos are now feeling like ads to get people to pay her. Here are three of the four videos she wants you to subscribe to and then trickle them out slowly. I reverse engineered the URLs so you can play them all at will. I can't figure out how to play 4, which is where she's gonna drop the shoe on how much you have to pay her to learn. https://www.drtyna.com/ozempicuncoveredvideo1evergreen?dfp=o2g7wyDop2 https://www.drtyna.com/ozempicuncoveredvideo2evergreen?dfp=o2g7wyDop2 https://www.drtyna.com/ozempicuncoveredvideo3evergreen?dfp=o2g7wyDop2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted August 16 Share Posted August 16 Yeah, these were just ads. I found price info using a scraper. I'll give you three guesses how much her GLP-1 online class costs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted August 18 Share Posted August 18 Here's ad number four. ZERO actionable info or content. She tells us how awesome she is compared to all other doctors, tries to dispel myths that nobody has, and tells you to buy her program. The original video had informative content for sure. The others, not really. And again, absolutely NOTHING you can take away to actually put into practice. Only an add. Goddammit. https://www.drtyna.com/ozempicuncoveredyvideo4evergreen?dfp=o2g7wyDop2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted August 18 Share Posted August 18 Only 7 hours from the last ad/closer video to sending me outright sales spam. Sad, fucked up. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
02XXCA Posted August 19 Author Share Posted August 19 On 8/15/2024 at 12:24 PM, SwampNut said: Ok Chris, you were wrong, this isn't just great. It may be the best peptide video I've ever seen. The clickbait title and bullshit first few minutes are just a consequence of what it takes to get views. It's super packed with info, everyone should hear it, and I've passed it along a lot. I'm gonna stop doubting you when you recommend a video, even if the clickbait parts annoy me. I was wrong. She seems like she is a morea holistic doctor that tries to help patients get into a healing state thru factors they can control such as diet and exercise where they can benefit by taking some peptides and other medicine at very low dose. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted Thursday at 03:57 PM Share Posted Thursday at 03:57 PM Yeah, her shit is 100% ads to drive you to buy. Like this: In this article, you will learn: What Ozempic is and how it works in the body. The potential benefits of microdosing Ozempic for metabolic health. How to approach microdosing safely, under medical supervision. All she says in the last item is to pay for advice...such as (link to her $2300 online materials). BTW, she's also anti-vaxx and has spread much misinformation on that. Currently one of her two Instagram accounts is banned and she won't come clean on why. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
02XXCA Posted Thursday at 04:36 PM Author Share Posted Thursday at 04:36 PM 36 minutes ago, SwampNut said: Yeah, her shit is 100% ads to drive you to buy. Like this: In this article, you will learn: What Ozempic is and how it works in the body. The potential benefits of microdosing Ozempic for metabolic health. How to approach microdosing safely, under medical supervision. All she says in the last item is to pay for advice...such as (link to her $2300 online materials). BTW, she's also anti-vaxx and has spread much misinformation on that. Currently one of her two Instagram accounts is banned and she won't come clean on why. You seem to be doing all the things she suggests minus the medical supervisison, so you don't need any advice.....Carlos's pharmacy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted Thursday at 04:53 PM Share Posted Thursday at 04:53 PM LOL, well, I'm not microdosing. I'm using tirzepatide at 66% of max. Semaglutide makes me feel shitty and I mostly don't use it. Moriah considered the microdosing for overall inflammation. Oh yeah, the pharmacy...looks like my skin peptide blend is helping a neighbor's kid lose his teen acne problem. It's early on, but there are changes already. This is based on ingredients that are so mainstream you can buy some pre-made products at Target. But they are weak and way overpriced in stores. I'm making it at doctor recommended strength which is still 40% below max. Also two of the products in it are often adulterated in the market; GHK-Cu and Hyaluronic Acid. The HA can just be weak, but the GHK-Cu is often faked with methylene blue which can be toxic. My supply is tested by a lab in Tucson, and then I double-test it with a pretty easy at-home test. Does Target test? Dunno. They don't publish results like my sources do. It's like the world is a lie for the benefit of marketers. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
02XXCA Posted Thursday at 05:07 PM Author Share Posted Thursday at 05:07 PM (edited) 14 minutes ago, SwampNut said: It's like the world is a lie for the benefit of marketers. That is the scarey thing when ordering peptides from sources on the web. Testing makes sense if you are able to. I'm still amazed at how alot of the influencers out there are pettiling solutions and they keep refering to animal studies which don't necassarily translate to humans. Some of the doctor websites and youtube channels which are part solicitation also need to be taken with a grain of salt I supose. Edited Thursday at 05:07 PM by 02XXCA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwampNut Posted Thursday at 06:26 PM Share Posted Thursday at 06:26 PM 1 hour ago, 02XXCA said: I'm still amazed at how alot of the influencers out there are pettiling solutions and they keep refering to animal studies which don't necassarily translate to humans. Some of the doctor websites and youtube channels which are part solicitation also need to be taken with a grain of salt I supose. I'm not exposed to this, but it's clearly super rampant because people seem to be buying fake snake oil like crazy, and asking nonsense questions in peptide forums. Or asking me directly since now I guess technically I'm an influencer. Anything advertised on FaceBook is a dangerous scam. Anything advertised anywhere is probably mostly bogus, but with FB it's pretty well all of it. But there are lots of ways to get tested peptides, though Lilly and others are constantly fighting to keep that banned. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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