PeptidePedia
About

Built to be clear, not promotional.

PeptidePedia is an educational reference for the most-discussed research peptides. Our goal is simple: help curious readers understand what a peptide is, why people are studying it, what the evidence actually says, and where to read the original sources.

What we do

  • Write plain-English profiles for each peptide.
  • Summarize the best available studies — human and animal.
  • Grade evidence conservatively, using five levels (Strong Human, Moderate Human, Limited Human, Animal / Lab, Experimental).
  • Link to PubMed, ClinicalTrials.gov, FDA, NIH, and WADA where relevant.

What we don't do

  • We do not sell peptides.
  • We do not recommend treatment.
  • We do not publish dosing guidance.
  • We do not provide medical advice.
  • We do not collect personal health information.

How evidence is graded

We use five levels — from Strong Human Evidence (FDA-approved drugs with multiple high-quality trials) to Experimental (not enough reliable data exists). Popular peptides are often graded lower than online discussions suggest — that's by design.

Sources

Every claim links back to a primary source: a published study, an FDA label, a clinicaltrials.gov entry, a WADA rule, or an equivalent. We don't cite blog posts or vendor pages.

Important:

PeptidePedia is for educational and informational purposes only. We do not sell peptides, prescribe peptides, provide medical advice, or recommend treatment. Peptides may not be approved for human use except in specific legal prescription or clinical contexts. Always consult a licensed medical professional before making health decisions.