Peptides for a tweaked back

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CornPop

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So I just tweaked my back pretty good. For the second time in the same spot and pretty sure it’s a herniated disk. When it happened the first time I felt it for months. I did nothing to help it but it got better and better for a month and then it was just a dull pain that I thought would last for life. It only got better after I started working out which sounded counterintuitive.

My question is does anyone have experience with a peptide helping this? My first thought is KLOW. But I am not sure if that is just for muscles/tendons and won’t directly help a slipped disk. Has this helped anyone with this particular injury? Looking for some anecdotes or ideas.
 
Honestly, a slipped disc is a little beyond what a humble peptide can fix.

But maybe someone here has been in your shoes and found some relief through hgh or bp157 or kpv.
 
You need to spend some time laying flat on your ass on hard ground, not the bed or the couch. As far as drugs go funnily enough the ones that cause you to weigh less and therefore put less pressure on your back are probably your best bet.
 
If the disc is not too herniated, stem cell +PRP, followed by BPC, TB-500, Cartalax, and KPV could be a choice. But the more time goes on, the worse the injury is likely to get. It's after all a wear and tear response.
 
Another option would be the GH peptides.

Part of the reason KPV is popular is the idea of relief sooner than later.

One anecdote for BPC+TB:

Bigdog0628 said:
I have bulged disc in my L4/5 S1 for 20+ years which internally caused hip pain knee pain muscle pain in my right leg. I have been taking Wolverine stack for 5 weeks and its alleviated all the pain in my hips and joints. I am more flexible now then ive been in years. It has not completely restored the disc but the inflammation has been minimized where it doesn't bother me hardly. I am back to running side to side movements and I feel at times I have been given back 20 years on my life! I also squatted the other day with zero pain and full mobility. BPC/TB has done wonders in my life.

BTW, an inversion table was recommended by a neurosurgeon years ago. I should use it more since I usually go months at a time without using it.
 
Before my torn rotator cuff, I used to do back bridges because I had a herniated disc, at T3 or T4... I don't remember. It's the one that causes nerve impingement, resulting in radiating pain down the left arm. Anyway, I haven't experienced the pain since 2022 when I lost weight due to sleeve surgery. Now, after the stem cell and PRP in 2025, it's better, also did BPC, TB-500
 
I've lived with a herniated disc for twenty years and it was pretty bad when it first happened as I experienced paralysis and had to undergo intense physical therapy. Like you, exercise made it better though it sounds counterintuitive. What I found very helpful was doing inversions to help get the pressure off the disc and also realign things. Now I'm quite strong with a lot more muscle mass compared to before, which allows me to live more or so like a normal person without thinking about it much.
 
To make physical therapy less boring:

The Efficacy of Cannabis in Reducing Back Pain

Full-spectrum extract from Cannabis sativa DKJ127 for chronic low back pain: a phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled trial - Nature Medicine

A phase 3 trial found that VER-01, a full-spectrum cannabis extract, reduces chronic low back pain, improves physical function and sleep and shows no signs of dependence or withdrawal.

www.nature.com

According to Gemini, some of the most anti-inflammatory (non-GLP) peptides, with KPV and BPC leading the pack:

quoted said:
KPV > BPC-157 > ARA-290 > TB-500 > GHK-Cu

But ranked only by human trials, the order is somewhat opposite (since zero human trials for KPV):

quoted said:
ARA-290 > GHK-Cu > TB-500 > BPC-157 > KPV
 
I have a prolapsed L5S1. I am on my second month of taking Klow but don't think it's helped much.

What helps me the most is going on walks. The days I manage to do around 10 thousand steps are the days that I feel pain free.

Heard that stem cells therapy helps but I don't like the idea of injections anywhere near my spine.
 
I asked the same question here, and got all the same advice. Lots of knowledgeable people here. 😊

I have bulging discs at C 4-5, 5-6 and 6-7.

Central disc protrusion indenting the thecal sac at C4-5, and annular tear at C 5-6. This was imaging from an MRI done in 2024, things have gotten worse since then.

I have BPC-157 and KPV on the way, to add to my current treatment plan. I do physio and chiro 2x a week, and take a non-opioid pain medication.

I hope you can find some relief!
 
Anything serious would of course take more than a peptide to fix as others have said, but at least for short term or as an add-on to other things it’s possible KPV would be of some help as there’s likely inflammation related to whatever you’re experiencing there. A few days ago I tweaked my lower back just standing up and while it wasn’t excruciating or anything it was still one of those things where I felt I needed to roll out of bed instead of directly sit up lol. KPV is one with a good safety profile so I took a couple 1-1.5mg shots every 12 hours to see if that would help and I was completely fine in about a day and a half to 2 days. Whether I would’ve been anyway without the KPV who knows lol, but if you’re in similar pain theres maybe enough reason to give it a try 🤷‍♂️
 
And just to be clear, that’s a higher dose than I’ve seen recommended anywhere, I believe pep-pedia suggested .5 mg 2x/day for an acute flare-up but because I felt comfortable personally with the safety profile I decided to give 1mg a shot right off the bat, then when that was tolerated well I tried 1.5 and was personally fine as well. I don’t want to give the impression that I had anything besides personal YOLO behind that dosing tho lol.
 
Calm Logic said:
To make physical therapy less boring:

The Efficacy of Cannabis in Reducing Back Pain

Full-spectrum extract from Cannabis sativa DKJ127 for chronic low back pain: a phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled trial - Nature Medicine

A phase 3 trial found that VER-01, a full-spectrum cannabis extract, reduces chronic low back pain, improves physical function and sleep and shows no signs of dependence or withdrawal.

www.nature.com

According to Gemini, some of the most anti-inflammatory (non-GLP) peptides, with KPV and BPC leading the pack:

But ranked only by human trials, the order is somewhat opposite (since zero human trials for KPV):
one problem there, they included anti-inflamm but not the builders.
 
IMO, disc herniation is serious enough to include a three-pronged approach: Counter-inflamm, Fuel, and builder.. So, BPC, TB500, KPV, CARTALAX, GHK-CU, PEG MGF, COLLAGEN, Chondroitin, hyaluronic acid, vit C AFTER adipose derived pluripotent stem cell therapy and PRP.

Elocin said:
chiro 2x a week
Do they use torsion machine? You may have to build muscle.
 
Smiter said:
Do they use torsion machine? You may have to build muscle.
I’ll admit, I am not educated enough on chiropractic care at all. This is my first time seeing one, and I have only been 3 times so far. He is very hesitant to work on my neck. He is afraid to cause more damage 😕. He’s going very slow, and it’s basically just been stretching, and loosening up the muscles. However, he did say this will progress. To what? I’m not sure yet lol. My physio has been much more aggressive though.
 
Elocin said:
I asked the same question here, and got all the same advice. Lots of knowledgeable people here. 😊

I have bulging discs at C 4-5, 5-6 and 6-7.

Central disc protrusion indenting the thecal sac at C4-5, and annular tear at C 5-6. This was imaging from an MRI done in 2024, things have gotten worse since then.

I have BPC-157 and KPV on the way, to add to my current treatment plan. I do physio and chiro 2x a week, and take a non-opioid pain medication.

I hope you can find some relief!
Holy smokes keep us in the loop to know if that peptide bundle actually helps you, i wish you all the success in the world.
 
Elocin said:
I’ll admit, I am not educated enough on chiropractic care at all. This is my first time seeing one, and I have only been 3 times so far. He is very hesitant to work on my neck. He is afraid to cause more damage 😕. He’s going very slow, and it’s basically just been stretching, and loosening up the muscles. However, he did say this will progress. To what? I’m not sure yet lol. My physio has been much more aggressive though.
I'm gonna jump in here, if you find a good Chiropractor then stick with them and If they're not messing with your neck, I respectfully say keep it that way! I had a great Chiropractor for 7 years, adjusted my neck as well. Then he moved and I tried 4 more next 3 years then gave up. I lasted a couple years, till my neck and feet were tingling one dat and I found a highly rated one. Fourth visit on the neck, messed up my jaw, which added to my headaches and I couldn't talk and had TMJ physical therapy for 4 weeks. I got the X-ray on my dental records where my jaw moved a little. I know we have similar neck problems and I think better to leave it alone. If you had minor neck issues, maybe ok, but as we progress and neck gets worse. Nope.
 
I have two herniated discs in my lower back, been dealing with it for the last ~decade and have gone through periods of severe pain where I could not sleep, sit, or do much exercise at all. For the last couple years I have avoided serious flare-ups and have been able to lift heavy, play basketball, move heavy stuff around the house, etc. I expect that at some point I will need surgery to address the disc directly, but I am just trying to maintain as long as possible before that.

The short answer is, when it's really bad you need a medical intervention beyond peptides. When I first got really hurt they made me do PT and gave me gabapentin + flexeril, which took the edge off a LITTLE BIT but really didn't improve function. The PT was honestly counterproductive because the injury (inflammation) was still very active and the PT was just aggravating it further, but that's what the insurance companies want you to do before paying for anything else. I finally got two cortisone injections under anesthesia about a month apart and that cleared it up completely.

In my experience, a chiropractor is good for maintenance but in the 2-3 scenarios where I had a bad flare up they really couldn't do much for me and I had to take prednisone to calm down the inflammation again.

What has helped me avoid serious flare-ups is doing consistent work to strengthen my core, stretching and mobility, and other general exercise. When I have the more routine mild soreness / tightness from exercise or sitting too much, I do find that Wolverine stack provides some symptom relief, but it is subtle. My understanding of my own injury is that the positioning of my damaged discs basically always has the potential to rub on the nerve and create inflammation, which can have a spiraling effect when it gets bad, so anything that reduces inflammation has the potential to help in a general sense. But back injuries are notoriously fickle & individualized, so what helps one person may not help another, etc.
 
Smiter said:
IMO, disc herniation is serious enough to include a three-pronged approach: Counter-inflamm, Fuel, and builder.. So, BPC, TB500, KPV, CARTALAX, GHK-CU, PEG MGF, COLLAGEN, Chondroitin, hyaluronic acid, vit C AFTER adipose derived pluripotent stem cell therapy and PRP.

Do they use torsion machine? You may have to build muscle.
Where’d you go for your stem cell therapy?
 
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