BPC-157 and TB-500 Stack: Tracking a Multi-Compound Protocol
How to keep an accurate log of a research-peptide stack — reconstitution details, separate schedules on one timeline, and injection-site rotation across compounds — using Dosed as a record-keeper.
What You'll Learn
- ✓Record reconstitution details and concentration for each compound in a stack.
- ✓Keep two compounds’ schedules organized on a single timeline.
- ✓Track injection-site rotation across a multi-compound protocol.
1. Direct Answer: Tracking a Two-Compound Stack
A research-peptide stack means logging more than one compound at once — here BPC-157 and TB-500 are used as the example — and the tracking challenge is keeping each compound’s reconstitution, concentration, and schedule distinct while viewing them on one timeline. Your role is record-keeping, not protocol design: capture the reconstitution volume and resulting concentration for each compound, log every administration with its date and site, and let the app keep the two schedules from blurring together. An important framing up front: these are RESEARCH compounds that are not approved for human use in many jurisdictions, this guide covers tracking mechanics only, and it makes no claims about effects or safety. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional, and follow all applicable laws.
Key Points
- •A stack means tracking two or more compounds with distinct details on one timeline.
- •Capture reconstitution volume and concentration per compound.
- •Research and tracking focus only — no effect or safety claims.
2. Logging Reconstitution and Concentration
Lyophilized research peptides are reconstituted with bacteriostatic water, and the resulting CONCENTRATION (mg per mL) determines how a logged dose maps to a syringe volume. For each compound, record the amount of peptide in the vial, the volume of bacteriostatic water added, and the concentration that produces — then the date of reconstitution, because reconstituted peptides have a limited usable window that a log helps you track. Keeping these numbers per compound is what prevents the most common stacking error: applying one compound’s concentration to the other. Dosed includes a reconstitution record so the math is stored rather than recalculated each time, and so a dose entered in mg can be displayed consistently. This is record-keeping; it is not guidance on amounts.
Key Points
- •Log vial amount, bacteriostatic water volume, and resulting concentration per compound.
- •Record the reconstitution date to track the usable window.
- •Per-compound concentration prevents mixing up the two compounds’ math.
3. Keeping Two Schedules on One Timeline
Different compounds in a stack often run on different frequencies, which is exactly where paper logs fall apart. The tracking solution is to treat each compound as its own scheduled item with its own cadence, while the app overlays both on a single calendar so you can see the full day’s administrations together. This makes a missed dose for one compound obvious without losing sight of the other, and it prevents the two from being conflated in memory. Mark the start date of the stack so the overall duration is visible. The benefit is a single coherent history of a multi-compound protocol — useful for your own records and for any conversation with a healthcare professional — without the app suggesting what the schedule should be.
Key Points
- •Track each compound as its own scheduled item with its own cadence.
- •Overlay both on one calendar to see the full day at a glance.
- •Mark the stack start date so total duration is visible.
4. Site Rotation Across Compounds
When multiple injections occur in a short window, rotating sites is part of accurate tracking — and recording the site for each administration lets you see the rotation pattern across BOTH compounds rather than each in isolation. Logging the site every time builds a map of where recent injections went, so you can keep the rotation even when two compounds are administered close together. Dosed records the site per entry and can show the rotation history, which is far more reliable than trying to remember across a busy schedule. As with everything in this guide, this is a tracking feature for organizing a record; it is not a recommendation about technique, frequency, or suitability, which are matters for a qualified professional.
Key Points
- •Record the injection site for every administration, across both compounds.
- •A combined site history keeps rotation visible when injections cluster.
- •Tracking the rotation is a record-keeping feature, not technique advice.
5. Building an Exportable Record
The reason to track a stack carefully is to end up with one clean, exportable history: each compound’s reconstitution and concentration, the two schedules overlaid with dates, and the site-rotation map. Dosed compiles these so you can review the full protocol or share it with a healthcare professional, replacing scattered notes with a single timeline. The export reflects only what you logged and makes no interpretation. Because these are research compounds, keep your records factual and complete, follow all applicable laws and institutional rules, and discuss anything health-related with a qualified professional who has your full picture.
Key Points
- •Aim for one exportable history: reconstitution, overlaid schedules, and site map.
- •The export reports logged facts only — no interpretation.
- •Keep records factual and follow all applicable laws and rules.
6. Tracking a Stack in Dosed
Log each compound’s reconstitution, dose, site, and timing in Dosed and it tracks the full stack on a single timeline — separate concentrations and schedules per compound, a combined site-rotation history, and an export you can share. The app keeps the record organized; it does not design protocols or make claims about the compounds. This content is for research and educational purposes only, focuses on tracking features rather than medical advice, and you should always consult a qualified healthcare professional and follow applicable laws.
Key Points
- •Per-compound concentration and schedule kept distinct on one timeline.
- •Combined site-rotation history across the stack.
- •Export-ready record; no protocol design or compound claims.
Key Facts
- ★A stack requires per-compound reconstitution and concentration records.
- ★Concentration (mg/mL) maps a logged mg dose to a syringe volume.
- ★Overlay separate schedules on one calendar to catch missed doses.
- ★Record the site every time for a combined rotation history across compounds.
- ★These are research compounds — tracking focus only, no effect or safety claims.
Common Questions
1. Why record concentration separately for each compound in a stack?
2. What is the advantage of overlaying two schedules on one timeline?
3. Is this guide recommending a BPC-157 / TB-500 protocol?
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Common questions about this topic
No. It is strictly about tracking a multi-compound protocol — logging each compound’s reconstitution and concentration, keeping the schedules organized on one timeline, and recording site rotation. It provides no dosing, frequency, effect, or safety guidance. These are research compounds not approved for human use in many jurisdictions; consult a qualified healthcare professional and follow all applicable laws.
Concentration (mg per mL) is set when you reconstitute a peptide with bacteriostatic water, and it determines how a dose in mg corresponds to a volume on the syringe. Logging the concentration per compound lets a dose entered in mg display consistently and prevents confusing one compound’s math with another’s. This is a record-keeping detail, not advice on amounts.
When two compounds are administered in the same window, viewing site history for each in isolation makes it easy to lose track of the overall rotation. A combined site map across both compounds shows where recent injections went, helping keep the rotation organized. This is a tracking feature for record accuracy, not guidance on technique or frequency.
Log each compound’s reconstitution, dose, site, and timing, and Dosed tracks the stack on a single timeline with separate concentrations and schedules per compound, a combined site-rotation history, and a shareable export. The app organizes the record; it does not design protocols or make claims about the compounds. This content is for research and educational purposes only and is not medical advice — consult a qualified healthcare professional and follow applicable laws.