Calculate exact syringe units for the Wolverine Stack (BPC-157 + TB-500) pre-mixed blend. The dose shown is from the combined vial — no separate math needed.
500mcg · Daily
Summary: Add 2mL BAC water to your 10mg vial. Draw to 10.0 units on a U-100 syringe for a 500mcg dose. This vial will last 20 doses.
Does combining BPC-157 and TB-500 actually produce better healing than either peptide alone? The community figured this out before the researchers did. The Wolverine Stack (BPC-157 + TB-500, also called the healing stack) is a pre-mixed 10 mg vial containing 5 mg of each component. BPC-157 is a 15-amino acid fragment of body protection compound, a protein found in human gastric juice. TB-500 is a synthetic 7-amino acid fragment (Ac-LKKTETQ) of thymosin beta-4, a 43-amino acid protein involved in cell migration. The two peptides work through different but complementary mechanisms. BPC-157 upregulates VEGFR2 and FGFR1 receptors at the injury site, promotes angiogenesis, and modulates the nitric oxide system. TB-500 sequesters G-actin, upregulates VEGF 2.5 to 3.8-fold, and drives cell migration systemically. You don't need to inject TB-500 near the injury; it distributes body-wide. One retrospective clinical report tested the combination in 16 knee pain patients. Fourteen of sixteen reported significant pain relief at 6 to 12 months (Lee and Padgett 2021, referenced in PMID 40789979). Beyond that, evidence comes from the individual components: over 180 published BPC-157 papers (35 of 36 meeting systematic review criteria were animal studies per Vasireddi et al., PMID 40756949) and a Phase I human safety study on recombinant thymosin beta-4 (PMID 34346165). Community evidence is strong. Tens of thousands of user reports across r/Peptides, ExcelMale, and Longecity consistently describe accelerated soft tissue healing within 2 to 4 weeks. The Wolverine Stack is considered the gold standard healing combination. Both components are classified as FDA-prohibited bulk drug substances and cannot be legally compounded at U.S. pharmacies.
Not medical advice. Talk to your provider before using any peptide.
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