Peptide injections involve injecting bioidentical peptides, which are short chains of amino acids, to promote health and slow aging. Potential benefits include improved cognition, mood, sleep, skin quality, muscle building, fat loss, injury healing, and more.
At Harmony Hormone Clinic, our practitioners stays up-to-date on the latest peptide injection therapy research to provide patients with safe, effective treatment plans. We offer injections of peptides like BPC-157, TB-500, Sermorelin, and others.
Before starting peptide treatment, a full lab assessment of hormone levels, blood markers, and genomic analysis is recommended. This helps us customize therapies to each patient's unique needs. We evaluate factors like:
There are over 60 FDA-approved peptides available. Below we overview some of the most common.
BPC-157 is used to heal leaky gut, injuries, wounds, and neurological damage. It offers exceptional healing and anti-inflammatory properties.
Sermorelin stimulates natural growth hormone release, thereby increasing IGF-1 production. This can enhance protein synthesis, muscle growth, cognition, bone density, and more.
TB-500 accelerates injury healing, reduces inflammation, and halts muscle loss. It helps rapidly repair tendons, ligaments, muscle tears, and cartilage damage.
In summary, peptide injections can provide transformative benefits when prescribed properly. Our experienced medical team takes pride in leveraging the latest anti-aging technologies to keep patients healthy, active, and feeling their best at every age.
The sooner patients begin receiving peptide treatment, the more rapidly they may experience benefits. We urge those curious about peptides to schedule a consultation, so we can determine if therapy is appropriate.
Here at Harmony Hormone Clinic, we make the process seamless from initial intake to ongoing care. Let us help you start balancing your biochemistry today!
Certain peptide injections like BPC-157 have shown promise in healing and regenerating damaged tendons, ligaments, muscles and bones in initial trials. Though more research is still needed, these peptides may one day offer new non-surgical treatments for common sports injuries and arthritis.