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Re: Persistent Conflation of SARMs and Peptides in Vendor Marketing Materials: A Call for Accurate Categorization

Posted: Thu May 21, 2026 11:00 am
by GrumpyOldResearcher
biohack_bella_87 wrote:For those of you who have actually gone deeper into the primary Khavinson literature specifically - are you working from the english-language journal publications, or have you found translation resources for the Russian-language materials
Good question and good on you for asking it honestly.

Short answer: the english-language publications from Khavinson's group are real, peer-reviewed, and accessible. Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine carries translated Russian content and you can pull a number of their papers directly through PubMed. Start there. That is your most defensible primary source base.

The broader Russian-language body of work is more of a rabbit hole and the translation quality of whatever summaries are floating around online ranges from decent to actively misleading. I would not build a protocol rationale on anything you cannot verify through a proper journal.
IronGutPeptideBro wrote:my guess is that a lot of the clinical structuring was practical/administrative as much as mechanistic
This is probably closer to the truth than most people want to admit. Inpatient administration contexts drive protocol structures in ways that have nothing to do with optimized pharmacodynamics. The 10-day figure getting treated as some sacred mechanistically-derived number in community discussions is exactly the kind of folk wisdom laundering that IronGut is correctly flagging.

The honest answer is we do not have great data on whether burst versus sustained exposure is mechanistically superior for the endpoints being discussed. Anyone claiming otherwise should be showing their work.

This thread is doing what it should. Keep the sourcing rigorous.

Re: Persistent Conflation of SARMs and Peptides in Vendor Marketing Materials: A Call for Accurate Categorization

Posted: Mon Jun 01, 2026 11:00 am
by gainzwithgrace88
ok I have been lurking in this thread for a while enjoying the back and forth but I have to jump in here because something is genuinely bothering me and I cannot just stay quiet about it.
biohack_bella_87 wrote:I was referencing things I have encountered through a combination of sources that are not all primary literature.
I appreciate that bella is being honest about this, I really do, and IronGut calling it out was fair. BUT here is where I am going to push back hard because I feel like this thread has taken a turn that is starting to contradict its own premise in a really frustrating way.

We have spent like fifteen posts talking about how VENDOR DOCUMENTATION is bad because it presents things with false confidence and no sourcing. And now we are doing the same thing but with Khavinson citations as the prestige signaling instead of vendor FAQs. The name-dropping of "St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation" is doing the EXACT same work that "clinical studies suggest" does in a vendor FAQ. It sounds authoritative. It's not automatically wrong. But if you don't actually have the papers in front of you that is a PROBLEM.
IronGutPeptideBro wrote:anyone who tells you they definitively know the mechanistic reasoning behind that specific protocol structure, id be asking them to show their actual sources
YES. This. But IronGut I want to say this directly - you also threw out the ghrelin mimetic thing confidently and then walked it back, which I give you credit for, but that is kind of my point. We are ALL doing this to some degree and I think we need to be more honest about it instead of acting like the problem is only vendors and newcomers.

I came into this space through the healing and sleep side of things, BPC for an old shoulder injury, Ipamorelin for sleep quality, and I remember feeling SO overwhelmed by exactly what this thread is describing. But what saved me was not finding people who sounded more confident and used fancier source names. It was finding people who were willing to say "I don't actually know that for certain" and THAT is the standard I wish we held ourselves to more consistently here.

The Epithalon protocol discussion is great but can we be real that most of what we are saying is "I read something somewhere that seemed credible and this is what I landed on"? Because that is fine! That is literally how this community works! But let's not dress it up as settled science just because the thread we are in is about demanding higher standards.

I love this discussion genuinely. I just think we can do better than trading one type of false confidence for another.