What is Peptide Therapy?

Peptide therapy is treatment method that stimulates cellular regrowth systems. Peptides are made up of short amino acid chains, and are able to attach to receptors on the surface of cells. This allows them to provide cells and molecules with instructions for specific actions.

Peptides are critical to facilitating body responses and actions, and they can be beneficial for treatments of specific concerns.

This treatment allows for the direct targeting of a wide range of concerns as peptides are malleable in function. 

peptide cells

Benefits of Peptide Therapy

  • Peptides play a significant role in the regulation of multiple mechanisms of biological aging. Peptides have many functions in the body, some act like neurotransmitters, others like hormones.
  • Many peptides control and influence how our bodies react to diet and physical exercise. Isolation of these small peptides has led to a peptide theory of aging, which basically submits that the average lifespan can be increased by slowing down the aging process.
  • The theory is based on the underlying assumption that changes in gene expression result in decreased protein synthesis, eventually leading to aging and the development of diseases.
  • Stimulation of peptide production through the use of “peptide bioregulators” is designed to affect a specific organ, system, or condition in the body, using a highly specific short chain peptide to act as a shortcut to initiate protein synthesis and increase organ function.