What The Pep
fix heal

Wolverine Stack.

BPC-157
BPC-157
+
TB-500
TB-500

The most popular peptide combination in existence. BPC-157 heals the spot you inject. TB-500 helps your whole body recover faster.

Why these work together

BPC-157

  • Stays where you inject it
  • Calms pain and swelling
  • Effects show in days

TB-500

  • Spreads through your whole body
  • Calls cells in to repair damage
  • Effects build over weeks

What's in this stack

Who this stack is for

Good fit

  • Athletes recovering from tendon or ligament injuries
  • Post-surgical patients looking to accelerate healing
  • People with chronic joint pain who haven't responded to other treatments

Not a fit

  • Individuals with active cancer (due to angiogenesis properties)
  • Those seeking primary fat loss or metabolic changes

Typically prescribed

BPC-157

TB-500

Dose

250-500 mcg

Dose

2-2.5 mg

Frequency

1x or 2x daily

Frequency

2x weekly, then 1x

Route

Subcutaneous

Route

Subcutaneous

Duration

4-8 weeks

Duration

4-6 weeks

Always follow your provider's instructions. These are general reference ranges, not recommendations.

What to expect

Week 1-2

Reduced inflammation and pain at injury site

Week 2-4

Noticeable improvement in mobility and recovery speed

Week 4-8

Significant tissue repair progress, especially in tendons and ligaments

Individual results vary. These timelines come from clinical observation and community reports — not guarantees.

About the Wolverine Stack

Can I take these peptides in the same syringe?
Some providers prescribe them combined in one injection if the compounds are pre-blended by the compounding pharmacy. If you have separate vials, use separate syringes unless your provider explicitly says otherwise.
How long should I run the Wolverine Stack?
Protocols vary by stack. Short-term repair stacks typically run 4–8 weeks; longevity or GH stacks run longer with strategic off-cycles. Your provider determines the right duration based on your response.
Can I add other peptides to this stack?
Don't add compounds without provider guidance. Stacking more compounds raises the risk of receptor competition, side effects, and unintended interactions.