BPC-157
Body Protective Compound · PL 14736
A 15-amino-acid peptide with strong preclinical evidence for soft-tissue and gut repair.
Read library entryBPC-157, TB-500, GHK-Cu, PDRN, and PRP for tendinopathy, post-surgical recovery, and chronic soft-tissue concerns. Evidence-honest, diagnosis-first.

Recovery from injury, surgery, and chronic soft-tissue problems is one of the most underserved areas in medicine. Conventional care typically offers physical therapy, anti-inflammatory medications, time, and eventually surgical intervention if those fail. The middle ground — biological interventions that support tissue repair — has historically been the domain of orthopedic surgeons doing PRP injections and a small group of integrative practitioners using regenerative peptides.
The Tide offers regenerative medicine as a structured clinical service. We work with peptides like BPC-157, TB-500, GHK-Cu, and PDRN that have meaningful preclinical evidence for tissue repair, alongside platelet-rich plasma (PRP) for orthopedic injection scenarios. We approach this work with appropriate humility about the evidence — some of it is excellent, some of it is preliminary — and we tell patients honestly which is which.
You may be an appropriate candidate if:
You may not be the right fit if you have an undiagnosed injury that hasn’t been properly evaluated by orthopedics or sports medicine — imaging often comes first. You may not be appropriate if you have active or recent malignancy (the angiogenic mechanisms of some regenerative peptides raise theoretical concerns we take seriously), if you are pregnant or breastfeeding, or if you are looking for unrealistic outcomes from any single intervention.
Diagnosis first. Before any regenerative protocol, we want to understand what we’re treating. For orthopedic concerns, this means coordination with imaging and often with a sports medicine or orthopedic provider if you don’t already have one. For chronic gut concerns, this means appropriate GI workup. We are not the right place to bypass diagnosis — we are the right place to support recovery once diagnosis is in hand.
Physician consultation. Forty-five minutes to review your situation, imaging if available, what you have tried, and what realistic options look like. We discuss the evidence honestly: BPC-157 has strong preclinical evidence and accumulating clinical experience but limited human RCT validation; TB-500 has more substantial human trial work in some indications; GHK-Cu has decades of clinical and cosmetic use; PDRN has substantial Italian and Korean clinical evidence.
Targeted protocols. Recovery is not one-size-fits-all. Common approaches:
Coordinated care. Regenerative medicine works best alongside appropriate rehabilitation. We coordinate with your physical therapist, sports medicine physician, or surgeon when relevant. The peptides do not replace rehab; they may enhance its effects.
Most patients with chronic tendinopathy or soft-tissue concerns notice meaningful improvement within 3 to 4 weeks of starting therapy, with continued improvement over a 6 to 8 week cycle. Patients who see no benefit by week 4 are unlikely to benefit from extension. Post-surgical recovery protocols typically run 4 to 6 weeks. Gut-focused protocols often produce response within 2 to 4 weeks.
We are honest about effect sizes. These compounds support healing — they don’t replace it. A torn ligament that needs surgical repair won’t be fixed by peptides. A tendon that is healing slowly may heal faster. The framing matters.
We do not prescribe regenerative peptides without appropriate diagnosis. We do not promise outcomes we cannot deliver. We do not extend treatment cycles beyond what evidence supports. We do not use regenerative peptides in patients with active malignancy. We do not pretend the human RCT evidence for some of these compounds is more robust than it actually is.
Recovery and regenerative care is a cash-pay service. Pricing covers consultation, ongoing physician oversight, monitoring, and the medications. Costs vary substantially based on which peptides are used and the duration of the protocol — we discuss this transparently during consultation.
Many Houston practices offering peptide therapy for recovery operate transactionally — patient asks for BPC-157, prescription is written, patient leaves. The Tide approaches recovery as comprehensive care: appropriate diagnosis, structured protocols, coordination with rehab, honest discussion of evidence, and follow-up to confirm response. Our clinic at 6909 Grand Boulevard sits adjacent to the Texas Medical Center, with easy access from TMC, the Museum District, Bellaire, Rice Village, the Heights, the Galleria, and surrounding areas.
If you have searched for “BPC-157 Houston,” “regenerative peptide therapy Houston,” “PRP injection Houston,” or related terms, and you want clinical depth rather than a transactional script, this is the right place to start.
The honest answer: the preclinical evidence is substantial — over 200 published animal studies show consistent effects on tissue repair. The human RCT evidence is limited. We use BPC-157 because the mechanistic rationale is strong, the safety profile is favorable, and clinical experience supports its utility in specific indications. We tell patients honestly that this is a peptide where preclinical evidence has not yet been matched by gold-standard human trials.
PRP (platelet-rich plasma) is on our roadmap and we expect to offer it in the near future. PRP involves drawing your own blood, processing it to concentrate platelets, and injecting that concentrate at a site of injury. The evidence base varies by application — strong for some indications (lateral epicondylitis, certain tendon injuries), more modest for others. We will offer PRP when we can do it well, with appropriate equipment and protocols.
Sometimes. Patients with chronic tendinopathy or partial soft-tissue injuries may achieve adequate healing with regenerative protocols and skilled rehabilitation. Patients with complete tears, structural instability, or definitive surgical indications usually still need surgery. We are honest about which category your situation falls into.
Most cycles are 4 to 6 weeks of active therapy followed by an evaluation visit. Some patients need a second cycle after a break; some don’t. We don’t extend cycles indefinitely — if a peptide isn’t working at 4 weeks, more weeks usually won’t help.
Yes, and you should. Physical therapy is the foundation; peptides may amplify the healing response that PT and appropriate loading patterns produce. We coordinate with your PT or rehab provider when relevant.
Old injuries can sometimes respond to regenerative work even years after onset. The honest reality: chronic tendinopathy from incomplete healing of an old injury is one of the better indications for BPC-157 and TB-500 protocols. We evaluate each case individually.
Book a consultation. Bring imaging or records from any prior evaluation. We will not prescribe in the first visit if appropriate diagnosis hasn’t been done — but we can guide you to the right next steps and start treatment when appropriate.
Each entry below links to its full library page with mechanism, evidence, and clinical use details.
Body Protective Compound · PL 14736
A 15-amino-acid peptide with strong preclinical evidence for soft-tissue and gut repair.
Read library entryThymosin Beta-4 fragment
Cell migration, angiogenesis, and soft-tissue repair.
Read library entryTβ4 (full-length)
Full-length thymosin beta-4 molecule for tissue regeneration.
Read library entryCopper tripeptide-1
Collagen synthesis, wound healing, dermatologic use.
Read library entryPolydeoxyribonucleotide
Salmon DNA fragments; tissue repair and regeneration.
Read library entryLysine-proline-valine tripeptide
Anti-inflammatory tripeptide; gut and skin applications.
Read library entryEditorial articles from our medical team on the science underneath this service.
Preclinical data is genuinely encouraging. Human data is thinner than most clinics will admit. An honest look at what the evidence supports.
Read articleThe term gets thrown around like a synonym for steroids, supplements, and hormones. It is not. A practical primer on what makes a peptide, and what makes peptide therapy different.
Read articleHow to evaluate the evidence behind peptide claims. The questions that separate signal from noise in a field full of overstated marketing.
Read articleThe Tide serves patients across the Houston metro, with our clinic at 6909 Grand Blvd — directly adjacent to the Texas Medical Center. Patients come to us from Texas Medical Center, Museum District, Rice Village, Bellaire, the Heights, Galleria, and surrounding areas.
If you have searched for "BPC-157 Houston regenerative peptide therapy" or related terms, our editorial library and clinical team are designed to give you a clearer answer than most clinics provide.
Forty-five minutes with one of our physicians to walk through your goal, your history, and whether this service is a reasonable fit. Nothing is prescribed without lab work and a clinical decision.
Book consultation