Evidence-graded · Source-cited Peer-reviewer panel · 6 clinicians
PeptideVox

LL 37

LL 37 is a recurring topic in our peptide coverage. This hub collects every article tagged LL 37, newest first, each evidence-graded and tied to real, verifiable sources.

Injuries & Orthopedics

Best Peptides for Wound Healing & Skin Repair: The Evidence

Wound healing is one of the few peptide areas with genuine human controlled-trial data — but it is narrow, topical, and concentrated in chronic wounds. A clinical-editorial ranking of GHK-Cu, thymosin β4, LL-37 and BPC-157 by what the evidence actually supports in 2026.

Immune, Gut & Longevity

Best Peptides for Immune Support: Clinical Evidence (2026)

An evidence-first ranking of the peptides studied for immune support and function — thymosin alpha-1, thymalin, LL-37 and thymogen — separating a genuine Grade A human-trial candidate from single-school and preclinical claims.

Injuries & Orthopedics

Peptides for Burn Recovery: The Honest Evidence Review

LL-37, GHK-Cu, thymosin β4/TB-500 and BPC-157 all have real wound-healing biology — but not a single controlled human burn trial. A clinical-editorial ranking of what the evidence actually supports in 2026.

Peptide Encyclopedia

LL-37: Evidence, Mechanism, Dosing & Legal Status

A clinical monograph on LL-37 — the only human cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide. Small topical wound-healing RCTs (grade B), strong preclinical mechanism, and a sharply double-edged immune profile.

Frequently asked

What is LL 37?

LL 37 is a topic our editors cover across the site. This hub aggregates the related, evidence-graded guidance.

How often is the LL 37 hub updated?

This hub updates automatically whenever a new article is tagged LL 37, so the latest coverage appears first.

Are LL 37 claims sourced?

Yes. Every article here grades its efficacy claims A-D and cites real, verifiable studies, regulatory documents or trial registries.

Medical Disclaimer · Read in full

PeptideVox is an evidence reference, not medical advice. Nothing here authorizes you to acquire, possess, or self-administer any compound.

01 · Not FDA-approved

The majority of compounds documented here are not approved by the FDA for human use. Approved drugs (e.g. semaglutide, tirzepatide) are noted explicitly and require a licensed prescriber.

02 · Research chemicals

Many peptides — including BPC-157 and GHK-Cu in injectable form — are sold strictly "for research use only — not for human consumption." Purity, identity, and dosing of such products are not regulated or guaranteed.

03 · WADA-prohibited

Several compounds are banned in competitive sport under the WADA Prohibited List. Athletes risk sanction regardless of intent or formulation.

04 · Consult a clinician

Always consult a qualified, licensed healthcare professional before considering any compound. Individual risk depends on your full medical context.

This content is for informational and educational purposes only · No physician–patient relationship is created · Evidence grades reflect published data as of the stated revision and may change.