About Me

My photo
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
🌾 Welcome to My Low‑Carb Life As of January 2026, I’ve started a new chapter: I recently began the GLP‑1 Wegovy pill to help me get back on track with my weight‑loss goals. Life has thrown its share of challenges my way, and I’ve gained back some of the weight I once worked so hard to lose — so this is my reset moment. My journey began in 2008, when my doctor warned me about rising blood pressure and challenged me to lose ten pounds in three months. I ended up losing 26. By 2011, life had shifted again, and I recommitted to the low‑carb lifestyle that helped me feel strong and steady. And today, I’m still committed — just with new tools, new wisdom, and a whole lot more grace for myself. I live just outside New Orleans, deep in sweet Cajun Country, where we hunt, fish, “make groceries,” and enjoy the simple things. I exercise three times a week and practice relaxing on the off days. My immediate goal is to lose 15 pounds, and I’m focused on moving forward with intention and consistency. So pull up a chair and stay a spell — this blog follows my low‑carb journey, my Southern roots, and now, my Wegovy pill adventure.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Meet the 'P' in GLP-1

 

Meet the 'P' in GLP-1

 




Peptides 101

Peptides are defined as short chains of amino acids—the building blocks of proteins. They act as hormones, neurotransmitters, and signaling molecules in the human body, circulating in the blood and binding to receptors on targeted organs and tissues. They may also be synthetically produced or extracted from animal sources. 

 

Insulin, endorphins, and semaglutide are all peptides. Commercially produced peptides like GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1) are considered drugs and require US Food and Drug Administration approval before use or marketing. As of early 2026, dozens of approved peptides were on the US market, treating conditions as varied as cancer, diabetes, and thyroid disorders. 

 

In recent years, peptides have attracted interest for purported uses such as antiaging, skin care, and building strength. They can be rubbed on, injected, or swallowed. Those products are largely made by compounding pharmacies—facilities that produce small-batch drugs—using peptide components, and have typically not been reviewed by the FDA for their safety or efficacy. They're often technically sold for "research use only." Many of them are marketed largely on the basis of animal studies and lack rigorous human safety data, including BPC-157 (used to accelerate healing of musculoskeletal injuries) and TB-500 (used for muscle growth and healing).

 

Explore everything else we've found on Peptides.


Also, check out ... 

See the first dog ever treated with insulin—a peptide. (Read

> China's producing many peptides or peptide components sold in the US. (Listen

> Peptide TB-500, promoted for regenerative healing, is not FDA-approved. (Watch)

> A comprehensive review of BPC-157 studies identified no human safety data.  (Read)

 

No comments:

Total Pageviews