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About
Peptides Defined is an educational reference built by the PD Team for readers who want clearer peptide terminology, research context, and source-aware explanations.
We publish peptide profiles, research-literacy notes, glossary-style explanations, and editorial guides. The goal is to explain what a peptide topic is, how it is discussed, what kind of evidence surrounds it, and where uncertainty remains.
We do not provide medical advice, diagnosis, treatment guidance, dosing protocols, purchasing recommendations, or individualized health recommendations. Health decisions belong with qualified professionals.
Peptide names often appear across research papers, regulated medicine, clinic marketing, product listings, and social media. Those contexts can mean very different things. Our pages are designed to separate definitions, evidence quality, regulatory status, and public claims.
Peptides Defined is written and edited by Michael Bennett, our research editor, with support from the PD Team. Editorial review means checking scope, wording, citations, update dates, and source context before publication. We do not label pages as medically reviewed unless a qualified clinical reviewer has actually reviewed the page and is named.
We prioritize primary sources where practical: peer-reviewed papers, official prescribing information, regulatory documents, clinical trial records, and institutional references. Secondary sources can help with context, but they should not replace the primary source for factual claims.
If a page appears inaccurate, outdated, unclear, or missing important source context, use the contact page. Correction requests should include the page URL, the specific claim, and a source that helps verify the issue.