Feminine Wellness Podcast

Peptide Therapy Part 1: BPC-157 for Healing


Listen Later

I introduced you to my amazing Nurse Practitioner Amy Haddad back in January (Introducing Amy Haddad and Revique). She runs the entire Non-Surgical Revique Medical Aesthetics arm and Peptide Therapy alongside my Alinsod Institute Surgical Practice. She will provide you with a deep dive consultation and recommend what is best for your specialized condition. Hormones and Peptides.

Today, I will focus specifically on BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound).

BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound)

Tissue healing, gut support, inflammation control

BPC-157 is best known for its ability to support soft-tissue repair—including muscles, tendons, ligaments, and connective tissue. It also plays a role in gut lining integrity, which is essential for immune health, nutrient absorption, and systemic inflammation control.

Why it may be recommended:

* Slow or incomplete healing

* Chronic aches or tendon irritation

* Gut sensitivity or inflammation

* Recovery after procedures or injury

The “Repair Signal” Peptide for Healing, Recovery, and Resilience

When your body’s repair systems slow down, you feel it—aches linger, recovery drags, and inflammation seems louder. BPC-157 is a peptide being studied for how it may support tissue healing and inflammatory balance, especially in connective tissues and the GI tract. Here’s what we use it for, what we watch for, and how it may fit into a medically supervised wellness plan.

What is BPC-157?

BPC-157 stands for Body Protection Compound-157, a 15–amino acid (pentadecapeptide) that’s been studied largely in preclinical models for tissue-protective and repair-related signaling. It’s most commonly discussed in the context of tendon/ligament/muscle recovery and gut integrity.

Where is it found / what is in it?

BPC-157 is described in the literature as being derived from human gastric juice (stomach secretions) and studied as a stable peptide fragment.

Potential benefits (why we may recommend it specific patients)

Clinically, BPC-157 is most often considered to support:

* Soft tissue recovery (tendons, ligaments, muscle strains, surgical recovery)

* Inflammation signaling modulation

* GI support (for patients where gut inflammation and overall wellness overlap)

Important: much of the strongest evidence remains animal/preclinical, and high-quality human data are limited.

Potential risks / cautions

* Not FDA-approved for these wellness indications; human safety data are limited

* Risks increase if patients source peptides outside regulated medical channels (purity/contamination/dosing problems)

* If you have a history of cancer or are actively being evaluated for concerning symptoms, your plan must be individualized and conservative. This peptide increases the formation of blood vessels and increases blood flow to areas.

Options

* Standalone BPC-157 for focused recovery

* BPC-157 + TB-500 for broader tissue support (common pairing in clinical practice)

* Protocols may be short “recovery cycles” vs longer targeted plans (decision based on goals and response)

How should I take it?

This is individualized and clinician-directed. There are Risks/Benefits to consider. Amy will teach you. The practical “how” usually depends on:

* Goal (localized injury vs systemic recovery)

* Sensitivity/tolerance

* Whether it’s paired with other peptides or hormone optimization

Routes of administration

Most commonly discussed clinically as subcutaneous injection (tiny needle under the skin). It also comes in pill form. Some clinics discuss other routes, but the safest approach is what your clinician prescribes, from a reliable and safe medical supplier, with clear instructions.

Monthly cost (typical range)

Because compounding costs vary by dose, concentration, and supply chain, a realistic patient-facing range is:

* $250–$600/month for a single-peptide plan

* $400–$900/month when combined with another peptide or more intensive protocols(Plus consults/labs as indicated.)

Links (articles + videos)

Articles / scientific background:

- BPC-157 Review (2025, Pharmaceuticals / PubMed): https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40005999/
- Regeneration or Risk? Emerging use review (2025, PMC full text): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12313605/
- Narrative review (2025, PMC full text): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12446177/
- BPC 157 Enhances GH Receptor Expression (PMC): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6271067/

Peptide BPC-157 - Does it Work? Watch these videos and learn more than what Doctors know:

Here are the opinions of two Canadian professionals who do not recommend it: The video above is from the amazing team at Talking With Docs from Canada. They are really good and you should subscribe! Thank you for letting me share this content with my patients and colleagues.

Here is the opinion o Quinn Stillson, MD (Dr. Quinn Medicine Man). Probably the best video on the topic.

His recommendation: If you have a disposition to get Cancer, avoid it. It is not for everyone. You need to be screened.

What Science Actually Says About BPC 157 Benefits: Another Opinion

How I Use BPC-157 to Support Surgical Healing

In my surgical practice, I focus intensely on optimizing the body’s natural healing response before and after procedures. When appropriate for a patient’s medical history, I may incorporate BPC-157 peptide therapy as part of a peri-operative wellness protocol designed to support tissue repair and recovery. My typical recommendation is to begin therapy approximately 1–2 weeks prior to surgery to help prepare the body’s inflammatory and repair pathways, and to continue treatment for 4–6 weeks following surgery, when the majority of tissue remodeling and healing occurs. During this time the peptide is used in carefully supervised dosing protocols coordinated with my clinical partner, Amy Haddad, RNP, who manages our hormone and peptide therapies. The goal is not to replace good surgical technique or proper post-operative care—those remain paramount—but to support the body’s own regenerative processes so patients heal as efficiently, comfortably, and completely as possible. This is NOT for everyone and you must be screened for cancer risk. This is for short term use in my surgical practice for healing at-risk patients.

Why Surgeons Care About Inflammation Control During Healing

Inflammation is a normal and necessary part of the body’s healing response after surgery, but it must occur in a balanced and controlled way. Too little inflammation can slow the early repair process, while excessive or prolonged inflammation can increase swelling, discomfort, and delayed tissue recovery. As surgeons, we aim to guide the body through this healing phase as efficiently as possible by supporting circulation, tissue oxygenation, and cellular repair signaling. Therapies that help maintain this balance—along with proper surgical technique, nutrition, rest, and thoughtful postoperative care—can contribute to smoother recovery and stronger long-term tissue healing.

The First Six Weeks of Surgical Healing: Why Timing Matters

The body’s healing process occurs in several predictable phases. The first week after surgery is dominated by inflammation and early tissue repair signaling. During the second through fourth weeks, fibroblasts begin laying down collagen and new connective tissue, gradually restoring structural strength. By weeks four through six, the remodeling phase begins, where tissues reorganize and strengthen, ultimately determining the quality of the final healing result. Because so much of this critical healing biology occurs during the first six weeks, supportive strategies during this window—proper postoperative care, hormone balance, adequate nutrition, and carefully supervised regenerative therapies—can help create the best environment for efficient recovery and optimal surgical outcomes.

ALINSOD INSTITUTE and REVIQUE IN ARLINGTON, TEXAS

The Warm Glow is real. You will be pampered. We have moved in!

We are having our Ribbon Cutting on March 25, 2026 at 11 AM!

We are having our Grand Opening on March 26, 2026 from 4-7 PM!

It has taken many months of planning and many more months of building out our beautiful new office here in the Veridian of Arlington, Texas. We will have family and friends and Arlington’s leaders for our ribbon cutting the day before. On Thursday, March 26, a little more than a month away, we will open our doors to you our patients and our friends and show off our new home and what we offer. Read the announcement below and click on it to sign up and attend. Or just show up! If you show up in person you may win one of my raffled treatments! Can’t beat FREE!

🩺 Our New Partnership in Arlington

This part brings me deep pride.

Just a few months ago, I opened my independent solo surgical practice here in Arlington. After decades in California, years of teaching around the world, and training thousands, it feels good to bring my craft into a private, intimate setting where I can focus on the highest-quality surgical work.

Now, Amy Haddad, RNP, opens Revique in the same medical complex.

Two practices.Two experts.One integrated vision for women’s health.

Together, we offer:

✔ surgical + nonsurgical excellence✔ personalized and private care✔ evidence-based regenerative therapies✔ advanced aesthetic and anti-aging medicine✔ a team with 50+ years combined experience✔ a bond built over nearly a decade

This is a union you will not find anywhere else. Teamwork at its best.

North Texas Is Now the Center of the Universe for Cosmetic Gynecology

I have taught surgeons from just about every continent.I have seen the evolution of this specialty from the inside. I am part of the history.

And I can say with total confidence:

North Texas is now the epicenter of modern Feminine Wellness.

With Amy leading nonsurgical care at Reviqueand my surgical services through the Alinsod Institute,Texas patients no longer need to travel across the country for world-class expertise.

It is here.It is local.And it is unmatched.

We welcome the world and the other 49 states.

📍 Location & Contact

Revique Medical & Aesthetics — Amy Haddad, MSN, APRN, FNP-C

📍 4040 N Collins St, Suite 134, Arlington, TX 76005📞 817-533-0988📧 [email protected]🌐 www.reviquemedical.com

Alinsod Institute — Red M. Alinsod, MD

📍 Same location📞 945-900-7576🌐 www.alinsodinstitute.com🌐 www.gynflix.com

Learn more about Red Alinsod, MD: Click on picture

Social Media:

Follow my Social Media adventures below as I educate and entertain every week. Join me on InstagramasVageniusMD.I have around 190,000 subscribers to my Cosmetic Gynecology Newsletter and 90,000 subscribers to this Labiaplasty Newsletter. Follow me on Instagram for fun and knowledge.

Instagram: VageniusMD

FB: Vagenius - Red Alinsod, MD

TicTok: VageniusMD

Websites:

Alinsod Institute

Gynflix

My Three Newsletters:

For the Lay Public and Medical Professionals: Feminine Wellness Newsletter

For Medical Professionals: Cosmetic Gynecology Newsletter

For Surgeons: Subscribe to the Labiaplasty and Vaginoplasty Newsletter:

ALINSOD INSTITUTEArlington, TexasPhone: 945-900-7576 Contact: Dian WhiteDr. Red Alinsod: [email protected]

www.alinsodinstitute.com

Feminine Wellness Newsletter is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.



This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit femininewellness.substack.com/subscribe
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Feminine Wellness PodcastBy Deep dives into Feminine Wellness from a Cosmetic Gynecologist