- today
This can be muscles, tendons, ligaments, fibrous tissues, nerves, fat, fascia, blood vessels and synovial membranes. Common soft-tissue injuries can include sprains, strains, contusions, tendonitis, or bursitis.
Examples of common injuries that may benefit from injury repair and rehabilitation peptides:
- Torn rotator cuff
- Ankle Sprain
- Diffuse axonal injury
- Soft tissue injury
- Torn ligament injury
- Torn cartilage injury
- Achilles tendon injury
- Muscle damage
Thymosin Beta-4, the Injury Peptide, has been shown to stimulate the growth of connective tissue, accelerating the rate of repair. This injury peptide is the synthetic version of the human body’s naturally occurring hormone. Further research is being conducted into its possibilities to regenerate-tissue for human heart muscle damaged by heart attack and heart disease after trials on mice showed promising results. It is also non-addictive, safe to use, cuts muscle spasm and helps fight inflammation as well as improving muscle tone and promoting strength.
Warning
THE GOODS OFFERED BY THE SELLER IS INTENDED FOR SCIENTIFIC AND DEVELOPMENT PURPOSES ONLY. The goods offered by the Seller include chemical substances that shall not be used as a drug, medicine, active substance, medical aid, cosmetic product, a substance for production of a cosmetic product neither for human consumption that is any food or food supplement or otherwise similarly used on humans or animals.
References / Links
- Bock-Marquette, I., Saxena, A., White, M. D., Dimaio, J. M., & Srivastava, D. (2004). Thymosin β4 activates integrin-linked kinase and promotes cardiac cell migration, survival and cardiac repair. Nature, 432(7016), 466–472. PubMed
- Smart, N., Risebro, C. A., Melville, A. A., Moses, K., Schwartz, R. J., Chien, K. R., & Riley, P. R. (2007). Thymosin β4 induces adult epicardial progenitor mobilization and neovascularization. Nature, 445(7124), 177–182. PubMed
- Philp, D., Huff, T., Gho, Y. S., Hannappel, E., & Kleinman, H. K. (2003). The actin-binding site on thymosin β4 promotes angiogenesis. FASEB Journal, 17(14), 2103–2105. PubMed
- Malinda, K. M., Goldstein, A. L., & Kleinman, H. K. (1997). Thymosin β4 stimulates directional migration of human umbilical vein endothelial cells. FASEB Journal, 11(6), 474–481. PubMed
- Crockford, D., Turjman, N., Allan, C., Angel, J., & Clement, J. (2010). Thymosin β4: structure, function, and biological properties supporting current and future clinical applications. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1194, 179–189. PubMed