Peptide Therapy:

The growing global interest in peptide-based therapies for treating diseases and enhancing wellness has raised both medical opportunities and safety concerns, prompting experts to call for greater caution and regulation.
- Peptides are short chains of amino acids, which are the fundamental building blocks of life.
- They are essentially smaller versions of proteins. While proteins typically consist of 50 or more amino acids folded into complex 3D shapes, peptides usually contain between 2 and 50 amino acids.
- In the human body, naturally occurring peptides act as crucial signaling molecules.
- They function as hormones, neurotransmitters, and local regulators, instructing cells on how to behave regarding metabolism, immune response, and tissue repair.
- Peptide Therapy uses synthetic or naturally derived peptides as medicines that mimic the body’s natural signaling molecules.
- These peptides bind to specific cell receptors in a “lock-and-key” mechanism, triggering targeted biological responses with fewer side effects compared to conventional drugs.
- Since peptides are easily broken down by digestive enzymes, most peptide therapies are administered through subcutaneous injections rather than oral tablets.
- Peptide-based medicines are increasingly used to treat conditions like diabetes, cancer, infertility, growth disorders, and hormonal diseases.
- A major example is GLP-1–based peptide drugs, widely used to regulate blood sugar and appetite in diabetes and obesity treatment.
- In oncology, peptides can target tumour receptors or deliver drugs directly to cancer cells, improving treatment precision.
- In regenerative medicine, peptides are being studied for tissue repair in muscles, nerves, and tendons.
- Peptides are also being explored in dermatology, wound healing, osteoporosis, cardiovascular diseases, and viral infections.
- Driven by trends in biohacking and anti-ageing, many people are self-injecting unapproved “research chemicals” bought online.
- Since these lack human clinical trials, they pose serious threats, including endocrine imbalances, metabolic disturbances, and severe cardiovascular risks.


