Peps for High BP?

Lucky_xo455

Active member
Hey everyone, I'm curious if anyone's had success using peptides to treat high blood pressure or improve vascular health. I've seen hexarelin and TB-500 mentioned as possibilities. Has anyone here seen their BP improve on hexarelin or similar?
 
I'm also interested in blood pressure solutions. I've been on 30mg of enalapril for over 15 years now. I know some people don't like it, but my doctors haven't been willing to switch me. It seems like my blood pressure issues are genetic. Even though I've always been active, eat a healthy diet, at nearly 50 years old the high BP reared its ugly head and has been a struggle to manage.
 
Update on my BP: I started taking 50mg of NAD+ injections every day about 2 weeks ago, and my blood pressure in the last week has dropped about 15 points on the top number and about 5 points on the bottom. I'm now around 120/76.
 
Looks like mostly research data. BP meds like valsartan seem to work well, and you can often get them pretty easily.
 
I personally didn't notice any benefit from sermorelin. It was also too expensive for my taste, and I didn't care for injecting it. I actually started a thread about the cost.
 
Hi everyone! I'm new to peptides and would love some advice. I'm considering semorelin/ipamorelin for perimenopause symptoms, low energy, and belly fat. I'm not sure how much bacteriostatic water to use to mix the peptides. Also, what would be a good dosage for someone about 130lbs, injecting at night, 5 days on/2 days off per week? I've seen 0.2-0.3 ml mentioned, but I'm unsure.
 
Val_53 said:
Hi everyone! I'm new to peptides and would love some advice. I'm considering semorelin/ipamorelin for perimenopause symptoms, low energy, and belly fat. I'm not sure how much bacteriostatic water to use to mix the peptides. Also, what would be a good dosage for someone about 130lbs, injecting at night, 5 days on/2 days off per week? I've seen 0.2-0.3 ml mentioned, but I'm unsure.

If you haven't bought it already, look into Mod GRF 1-29 (CJC-1295 no DAC) plus Ipamorelin separately instead of the sermorelin blend. It has a shorter half-life, which might work better for you.
 
IGF-1 fluid retention variance is individual enough that the absence at high levels isn't predictive for others - the sodium/potassium balance is the more actionable lever because it works through a mechanism that holds regardless of starting hormone profile.
 
Back
Top