GLOW Research Dosing Protocol
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For research use only. Not medical advice.
Overview
GLOW is a multi-peptide repair blend containing GHK-Cu, TB-500, and BPC-157 in one formulation.
Each component has been studied for tissue regeneration, inflammation control, angiogenesis, and wound-repair pathways.
By combining all three, GLOW aims to deliver a broad-spectrum repair effect often used in recovery, soft-tissue healing, and cosmetic-focused research models.The blend is typically run as a short, concentrated daily protocol.
Daily Dosing Protocol (Subcutaneous)
Standard Daily Dose
2,330 mcg (2.33 mg) once daily
Administered at a consistent time each day.
This delivers an approximate per-dose composition of:
GHK-Cu: ~1.7 mg
TB-500: ~0.33 mg
BPC-157: ~0.33 mg
Cycle Length
4-week continuous cycle (most common)
Run daily for 28 days
Optional 2–4 week break between cycles depending on research goals
Many researchers treat GLOW as a short, intensive repair cycle rather than a long-term peptide regimen.
Timing
Once daily, with flexible timing
Many use evening dosing to coincide with recovery periods
Morning dosing is also common in cosmetic or skin-focused research
Titration
A titration phase is not typically used with GLOW because the daily dose remains mild for each individual component.
However, sensitive subjects may optionally begin at half-dose for 2–3 days before transitioning to the full 2.33 mg.Common Research Notes
GLOW provides systemic repair effects from TB-500 + BPC-157 plus cosmetic/tissue-quality benefits from GHK-Cu.
Many subjects report faster response with GLOW than with any single peptide alone due to complementary pathways.
Injection-site warmth or minor flushing may occur initially.
Because GHK-Cu is stimulatory to collagen and skin-matrix gene expression, some researchers prefer morning or mid-day dosing for skin-focused protocols.
The 4-week cycle is typically sufficient for acute injuries, post-procedure recovery, or cosmetic remodeling.
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Are there any concerns with reconstituting these blended peptides? I noticed they have large volumes to reconstitute (70/80mg) and wondered how that is done.
@Steve like @myb said, it isn’t a problem at all. I have been researching Glow 70mg for months after starting with a 10/10 Wolverine blend. I prefer 3ml to reconstitute and load it into a pen. Typically doing 12 units based on the COA. Glow can burn, so some people prefer to add more bac water and I confirm this works.
There is also ample testing and research debunking the assertion made by certain YouTubers that blends will decompose and lose potency.
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How do you stop the GLOW burn?
I reconstituted 50/10/10 with 6ml BW. Dosed 20u, stung all day. Today I shot 20u into a 1ml syringe and filled the rest with BW. Still burns today as bad as the less diluted did yesterday.
When you all said it can sting, I assumed you meant like b12 stings going in then nothing. Not this all day sting BS
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I am diluting 70 mg Glow into 3ml and researching 12 units/day. sometimes small burn. Try injecting slowly, like 20 seconds to dispense. I know it doesn’t make sense, but I have found that injecting slowly burns less. Maybe try different spots. Are you using Hospira bac water?
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I was getting terrible welts from using GLOW, so I discontinued it and decided to try KLOW instead since it includes KPV which is an anti-inflammatory. I have been amazed at the difference. I now get zero stinging or welts. One thing to note is that I bought these from different vendors, so I can't be 100% sure that there weren't any other factors causing my reaction to the GLOW.
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I'm starting KLOW this weekend. I'll report back on the results and my research.
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I’m discontinuing Glow. Today all prior sites are red. Rat had a sleepless night due to a histamine response.
I read the constant burn is because GHK-Cu can irritate nerve fibers, no matter how diluted.
Only posting this to give anyone else a heads up, if their rat has a history of histamine intolerance. -
I’m discontinuing Glow. Today all prior sites are red. Rat had a sleepless night due to a histamine response.
I read the constant burn is because GHK-Cu can irritate nerve fibers, no matter how diluted.
Only posting this to give anyone else a heads up, if their rat has a history of histamine intolerance.@MyB Im a itchy boy myself. I can tell you bpc/tb4 always cause me to get itchy by day 3/4. Its well documented on other forums and reddit. Kpv can even push me into histamine issues if im doing too much for too long. Plain GHK is fine and im back to 6mg in the morning. I was doing 10mg but it was becoming too painful.
