For research use only Β· Not for human consumption
This material is reference information for laboratory study of research peptides. It is not medical advice and it is not instructions for human use, self-administration, or therapeutic application. Capital Peptides supplies research chemicals for in-vitro and animal-model study only. Discuss any health-related questions with a licensed medical practitioner.
1. Why bloodwork matters
Bloodwork does three things in a peptide research context:
- Screens for contraindications before you start. A pre-existing condition you didn't know about (elevated IGF-1, borderline diabetes, thyroid dysfunction) can make certain protocols significantly riskier.
- Objectively confirms the compound is working. Feeling better is useful but not sufficient β bloodwork confirms IGF-1 elevation for GH protocols, shows metabolic improvement for GLP-1 protocols, etc.
- Detects early adverse changes before they become clinical problems. Rising fasting glucose, elevated liver enzymes, or IGF-1 above range β all are manageable if caught early.
2. Baseline panel (pre-cycle)
Get this before starting any new cycle β ideally 1β2 weeks before the first injection:
| Test | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Full blood count (FBC/CBC) | Haematological baseline β flags anaemia, infection, or abnormal cell counts |
| Comprehensive metabolic panel (CMP) | Liver function (ALT, AST, ALP), kidney function (creatinine, eGFR), electrolytes |
| Fasting glucose + HbA1c | Insulin resistance / diabetes screening β relevant for GH-axis protocols |
| Fasting insulin | More sensitive marker of insulin resistance than glucose alone |
| IGF-1 | Baseline GH/IGF-1 axis status β critical reference for GH-axis protocols |
| Thyroid panel (TSH, Free T3, Free T4) | GH signalling affects thyroid conversion; catch dysfunction before it's compounded |
| Lipid panel | GH can alter lipid profile; useful baseline |
| PSA (males 40+) | GH stimulates prostate tissue; useful baseline for older males |
3. On-cycle monitoring
Repeat key tests at 6β8 weeks into a cycle:
| Test | What to look for |
|---|---|
| IGF-1 (GH protocols) | Should be elevated 20β50% above baseline. Above 400 ng/mL warrants dose reduction. |
| Fasting glucose (GH protocols) | Should not meaningfully increase above baseline. Rising glucose = GH-driven insulin resistance signal. |
| CMP (any protocol) | Liver and kidney function β should remain within reference ranges. |
| Blood pressure | GH can elevate BP via fluid retention. Easy to measure at any pharmacy. |
4. Post-cycle assessment
Get bloodwork 4β6 weeks after your last injection to confirm washout and return to baseline:
- IGF-1 should return to pre-cycle baseline (or close to it)
- Fasting glucose / HbA1c should normalise if elevated on-cycle
- PSA (if tested at baseline) should not be significantly elevated
- Thyroid markers should be stable
Post-cycle bloodwork also gives you data to compare with baseline β confirming what, if anything, changed over the cycle. This is valuable for planning future protocols.
5. Tests by peptide class
| Peptide class | Priority tests |
|---|---|
| GH secretagogues | IGF-1, fasting glucose, HbA1c, blood pressure, thyroid panel |
| GLP-1 agonists (semaglutide, etc.) | HbA1c, fasting glucose, lipid panel, CMP (especially amylase/lipase β pancreatitis risk) |
| BPC-157, TB-500 | CMP baseline β low additional monitoring required for healthy individuals |
| Melanocortin (PT-141, MT-2) | Blood pressure monitoring β melanocortin peptides can cause transient BP elevation |
| Cognitive (Semax, Selank) | No specific biomarker monitoring required for healthy individuals; baseline CMP |
| Thymosin Alpha-1, LL-37 | Immune markers if immunocompromised; CRP / ESR as inflammatory baseline |
6. How to get tested
Options in Australia:
- GP referral: Most cost-effective β Medicare covers standard panels. The challenge is justifying the full panel without revealing the research context. Framing as βI want a general health check and am particularly interested in my IGF-1 and metabolic markersβ usually works.
- Private pathology (no GP required): Services like Lyric Health, Afar Health, and Direct Labs allow you to order panels online and get tested at a pathology centre without a GP referral. More expensive but completely in your control.
- At-home testing: Finger-prick postal tests are available for some markers. Less reliable for IGF-1 and extended panels.
