pep-dose publishes dosing references and explainers about research peptides. Because people use this information to plan what they put in their bodies, every article is held to the sourcing and accuracy rules below.
Where our information comes from
We build articles from primary sources, in this order of preference:
- FDA-approved drug labels and regulatory filings, for compounds that have them (e.g. tesamorelin, semaglutide).
- Peer-reviewed clinical and pharmacological studies indexed in PubMed, PMC, and primary journals.
- Manufacturer certificates of analysis and stability data for reconstitution and storage guidance.
Every article lists the specific sources it draws from at the bottom of the page, each linked to the original. If a claim is not in our sources, it does not go in the article. We do not cite other blogs, vendor marketing, or forum posts as primary evidence.
How dosing figures are derived
Reconstitution math, concentrations, and syringe-unit conversions on this site are computed — not copied. The same calculation engine that powers the dosage calculator and the tracking app generates the worked examples in our protocols, so the numbers you read and the numbers the tools produce always agree.
Review and updates
Articles carry a published date and, when revised, an updated date in the byline. We revisit content when a source label changes, when new clinical data is published, or when a reader reports an error. Where an article has been checked by a named clinical reviewer, that review is stated in the byline; absent that line, the content has not been individually clinician-reviewed and should be read as an educational summary of the cited literature.
Independence and disclosure
pep-dose is sponsored by White Market Peptides. Sponsorship funds the site; it does not dictate what our articles conclude. Dosing guidance follows the cited evidence regardless of what any vendor sells, and sponsor placements are labelled as such wherever they appear.
Not medical advice
All information on pep-dose is for educational and research purposes only and is not intended for human therapeutic use. It is not a substitute for advice from a qualified clinician. Talk to a healthcare professional before starting any peptide protocol.
Corrections
Found something wrong or out of date? Tell us through the contact page and cite the source you believe is correct — we read every report and fix confirmed errors.