Redbud Medical Spa
Redbud Medical Spa
Peptide Therapy

Recovery, Injury & Inflammation

For tissue repair, healing, and chronic inflammation.

Wolverine Complex (BPC-157 + TB-500 + GHK-Cu)

Our comprehensive, multi-pathway healing protocol — one of our most requested recovery options.

The Wolverine Complex combines three peptides often used together to support tissue repair and reduce inflammation from several angles at once.

What is it?

A combination protocol of BPC-157, TB-500, and GHK-Cu, each explored for complementary roles in healing and recovery.

How it works

In preclinical research, these peptides appear to support tissue repair signaling, blood-vessel formation, and modulation of inflammation through different mechanisms — the rationale for combining them.

What it’s used for

Muscle, tendon, and ligament injuries; post-surgical recovery support; chronic inflammation.

Why patients choose it

It targets healing through multiple pathways and is one of our most-requested recovery protocols; many patients report faster perceived recovery.

What to expect

Improvements in comfort, function, and recovery tend to be gradual. Because it’s a combination, the plan is conservative and closely individualized.

Safety & side effects

Reported effects are generally mild and injection-site related. Human safety data for these peptides is limited, so combination therapy in particular must be individualized and medically supervised.

Who is (and isn’t) a candidate

Determined by consultation; generally not appropriate during pregnancy or with active or prior cancer, and not a substitute for established medical care.

Regulatory & sourcing status

The components (BPC-157, TB-500, GHK-Cu) are not FDA-approved for human use and are considered investigational; their compounding status is under active federal review in 2026. We work only with licensed compounding pharmacies, review Certificates of Analysis, and prescribe per current rules.

Last reviewed: 06/07/2026 — status is changing in 2026

BPC-157 Peptide Therapy

An emerging peptide explored for recovery and tissue repair — approached honestly, with full medical oversight.

BPC-157 is one of the most talked-about peptides in the recovery space. The science is still early and the regulatory picture is evolving, so we approach it with candor.

What is BPC-157?

A synthetic peptide based on a sequence originally identified in gastric fluid, studied largely in laboratory and animal models for tissue repair and inflammation.

How it works

In preclinical studies it appears to support blood-vessel formation, tissue-repair signaling, and modulation of inflammation. Most of this work is in animal models, so it should be understood as early science.

What it’s explored for

Muscle, tendon, and ligament recovery; post-injury and post-surgical support; gut health; chronic inflammation.

Why patients are interested

Reports of faster perceived recovery; a broad, multi-system healing profile; a frequent component of combination protocols.

What to expect

Gradual changes in comfort and function rather than dramatic, immediate effects. Because robust human dosing data doesn’t exist, plans are conservative and monitored.

Safety & side effects

Reported effects are generally mild and injection-site related, but large-scale human safety data is limited, and FDA has previously flagged questions around immunogenicity and product purity — which is exactly why oversight and careful sourcing matter.

Who is (and isn’t) a candidate

Discussed case by case; generally not appropriate during pregnancy/breastfeeding or with active or prior cancer, and never a substitute for established care.

Regulatory & sourcing status

BPC-157 is not FDA-approved and is considered investigational. Its U.S. compounding status is actively evolving in 2026 and under federal review. We work only with licensed pharmacies, review COAs, and never use research-only material for patient care.

Last reviewed: 06/07/2026 — status is changing in 2026

TB-500 Peptide Therapy

A peptide explored for soft-tissue repair and mobility, often used in combination protocols.

TB-500 is studied for its potential role in cellular repair and tissue regeneration, particularly for soft-tissue and joint concerns.

What is TB-500?

A synthetic version of a fragment of thymosin beta-4, a naturally occurring protein involved in cell repair and migration.

How it works

In preclinical research it appears to support cell migration, blood-vessel formation, and tissue regeneration — processes central to healing.

What it’s explored for

Soft-tissue injuries; joint pain and mobility.

Why patients choose it

Reports of faster recovery and improved mobility; commonly paired with BPC-157 in recovery protocols.

What to expect

Gradual improvements in flexibility and healing over time.

Safety & side effects

Generally reported as mild, with limited large-scale human safety data — medical supervision is important.

Who is (and isn’t) a candidate

Determined by consultation; generally not appropriate during pregnancy or with active or prior cancer.

Regulatory & sourcing status

TB-500 is not FDA-approved and is considered investigational; its compounding status is under active federal review in 2026. We source through licensed pharmacies and prescribe per current rules.

Last reviewed: 06/07/2026 — status is changing in 2026

GHK-Cu for Skin & Hair

A copper peptide that supports collagen production, skin quality, and tissue repair.

GHK-Cu is a naturally occurring copper peptide widely valued in skin and hair applications for its role in regeneration.

What is GHK-Cu?

A copper tripeptide found naturally in the body, used in skincare and explored for tissue repair.

How it works

It’s associated with stimulating collagen production and supporting skin remodeling and repair.

What it’s used for

Skin rejuvenation; hair restoration support.

Why patients choose it

Interest in improved skin quality, firmness, and regeneration.

What to expect

Gradual improvements in skin and hair quality over time.

Safety & side effects

Most commonly used topically and generally well tolerated; injectable use is reviewed individually.

Who is (and isn’t) a candidate

Determined by consultation and your aesthetic goals.

Regulatory & sourcing status

GHK-Cu is widely used in cosmetic/topical products. Injectable or systemic use is not FDA-approved and is considered investigational. We source through reputable, licensed channels and prescribe per current rules.

Last reviewed: 06/07/2026

The Redbud Approach

At Redbud, peptide therapy is never a quick fix. It starts with a consultation and health history, appropriate baseline labs, and an honest conversation about whether this therapy fits your goals. From there we build an individualized plan, monitor your progress and tolerability, and adjust as needed — with attention to your safety and your long-term health. If a therapy isn’t right for you, or a better-studied option exists, we’ll tell you. The goal isn’t just results; it’s safe, sustainable outcomes grounded in good medicine.

Common questions

Why combine three peptides?
Each is explored for a complementary role in healing; together they target recovery from multiple angles.
Is the Wolverine Complex FDA-approved?
No — the components are investigational and their status is under review.
Is the Wolverine Complex safe?
Reported effects are usually mild, but human data is limited — which is why close supervision matters.
Is BPC-157 FDA-approved?
No — it’s investigational, and its status is under federal review in 2026.
Does BPC-157 actually work?
Most evidence is from lab and animal studies; human data is limited, and we’re candid about that.
Is BPC-157 legal?
Its compounding status is evolving; we prescribe only per current regulations and source through licensed pharmacies.
Is TB-500 FDA-approved?
No — it’s investigational and under review.
Is TB-500 used alone or in combination?
Often in combination (e.g., with BPC-157), though plans are individualized.
Is TB-500 safe?
Reported effects are usually mild, but human data is limited.
Is GHK-Cu safe for skin?
It’s widely used in topical skincare and generally well tolerated.
Is GHK-Cu topical or injection?
It’s most commonly used topically; we’ll recommend the right approach for your goals.

This page is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Peptide therapies require evaluation by a licensed provider, and individual results vary. Some therapies described here are not FDA-approved and are considered investigational; regulatory status is evolving. Nothing here is intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Medically reviewed by Tanna Donalson, PA-C 06/07/2026.

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