10mcg per kg means that a 220Lb animal would need 1mg dose. 1kg=2.2Lb.
Has anyone tried this on any of their animals yet? I would love a report. I have some to administer, but want to see if someone had an animal with a nagging injury that was getting fed up and tried it.
Thanks JJ! What do you think the half-life is? Should this be administered daily to a targeted area? Weekly?
so would the shelf life of BPC157 last 5 weeks being a 5ml vial? and dose of 1mg per week (spread throughout the week) be a start point?
although doesn't it suggest a 1mg dose in one shot? (assuming 220lb)
I'm getting arthro surgery next week so keen to order, but its pretty expensive...
cheers
Do you think that any healing peptide ( or even another one) would have any effect on eczema ?
BPC 157 looks interesting, but I can't find a single study based on human trials. Not one. Thymosin Beta-4 yes, but BPC 157 no.
If anyone knows of a previous study, or current clinical trial, please link it here.
Anyone have any updates on using this stuff.
I am thinking about stacking BPC-157 with TB500 which I already started for numerous nagging injuries.
There is a log on it here in the peptides section...maybe on page 2 or 3. His injury was healing twice as fast as normal.
10mcg per kg means that a 220Lb animal would need 1mg dose. 1kg=2.2Lb.
Thank you for correcting this. That makes it a lot more affordable!I just wanted to correct this because this is completely WRONG.
Please read... Dose translation from animal to human studies revisited
The correct formula for calculating a Human Equivalent Dose (HED) is the following:
Therefore:
Rat Km Value = 6
Human Km Value = 37
(ref here)
HED (mg/kg) = 10 (mg/kg) x ( 6 / 37 )
HED (mg/kg) = 1.62
For a 100kg or 220lb subject this would only require 162 mcg per day, NOT 1mg.
Thank you for correcting this. That makes it a lot more affordable!