The peptide catalog is not the prescription.
A catalog can give you vocabulary. It cannot decide what is appropriate for you. Use this field guide to turn peptide curiosity into better provider questions.
Catalog patterns worth knowing
Peptide clinic menus can include a wide mix of compounds and routes: CJC-1295, Ipamorelin, Tesamorelin, MK-677, AOD 9604, BPC-157, GHK-Cu, Semax, PT-141, and others. Do not treat the menu as proof that any one option fits you. Use it to ask smarter clinic questions.
Growth-hormone signal terms
Terms like GHRH analog, GH secretagogue, pituitary signaling, IGF-1, CJC-1295, ipamorelin, tesamorelin, MK-677, and sermorelin belong in this bucket.
Repair and recovery terms
Terms like BPC-157, AOD 9604, GHK-Cu, and tissue-repair language require extra caution because they can easily become unsupported treatment claims.
Route and handling terms
Injection, nasal, topical, oral lozenge, troche, refrigeration, refill cadence, and compounding pharmacy details change the real-world friction.
The five questions every peptide-curious reader should ask
- 1What exactly is being prescribed? Ask for the active ingredient, route, strength, and whether it is compounded.
- 2Who reviews the intake? Ask whether a licensed provider reviews health history before approval.
- 3What warnings apply? Ask about tumors, diabetes, thyroid disease, pregnancy, breastfeeding, medications, and supplements when relevant.
- 4What does it cost after month one? Ask about subscription, refills, cancellation, storage, and shipping.
- 5What is the lowest-friction route? If needles are the objection, compare injection-heavy clinic paths with Strut's oral sermorelin page.
Use the catalog the right way
If the catalog made you curious about sermorelin, do not jump from a peptide name to a buying decision. Start with the route, warnings, provider review, pharmacy, price, and refill questions on the Strut guide.
Do not use any peptide catalog as proof that you should use a peptide. Do not trust outcome claims without provider review, safety context, and clear sourcing. Use this guide for vocabulary, category mapping, and provider questions only.