Acute Injury & Emergency Recovery Protocol
A rapid-response protocol framework for the first injury phase, focused on structured recovery and safer return-to-function planning.
Rapid-response peptide protocol for acute injuries, post-surgical recovery, or critical illness support. Designed to initiate within 24–48 hours of injury or procedure.
Who it's for
Use this as an educational framework alongside standard medical care. Prioritize diagnosis, imaging when needed, wound/infection management, and progressive loading. Track pain, swelling, function, sleep, and adverse effects daily before any protocol adjustment.
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Acute Injury & Emergency Recovery Protocol PDF
Daily schedule, recovery checkpoints, safety flags, and practical adjustment rules in one quick reference.
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Protocol at a Glance
Cycle Duration
Acute phase: 2–4 weeks high dose. Transition to standard recovery protocol after initial healing.
Target Audience
Acute sports injuries, post-surgical patients, trauma recovery, severe illness convalescence
| Compound | Dose | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| BPC-157 Maximum loading dose acutely; cytoprotective, vasogenic, anti-inflammatory | 500 mcg | 3x daily (first 3 days), then 2x daily |
| TB-500 Double loading dose in acute phase; reduces inflammatory scarring from day 1 | 10 mg | Twice weekly |
| LL-37 Antimicrobial protection + innate immune activation at wound site | 200 mcg | Twice daily |
| Thymosin Alpha-1 Prevents trauma-induced immune suppression; maintains adaptive immune function | 1.5 mg | Daily for first 7 days, then 5 days/month |
| NAD+ Replenishes NAD+ depleted by PARP-mediated repair; accelerates cellular energy recovery | 500–1000 mg | Daily (IV preferred for severe cases) |
Free Peptide Guide
Acute Injury & Emergency Recovery Protocol PDF
Daily schedule, recovery checkpoints, safety flags, and practical adjustment rules in one quick reference.
Free access. No spam. This form sends the shared peptide guide that is live today.
Daily Schedule
Morning
Baseline check and first recovery block
Log pain/swelling/function, hydrate, and complete first planned dosing window if prescribed.
Midday
Mobility and tissue-support session
Light range-of-motion work, nutrition check, and symptom reassessment.
Evening
Second review and next-day planning
Record response to interventions, adjust only one variable at a time, and prioritize sleep.
Safety
- Escalating pain, neurological symptoms, fever, or wound changes require immediate medical review.
- Avoid stacking multiple new interventions on the same day.
- Reassess with a licensed clinician before returning to high-load activity.
Not appropriate as standalone care for fractures requiring stabilization, active infection without treatment, uncontrolled bleeding, or any medical emergency. Use only within a clinician-supervised recovery plan.
Who should avoid
- Anyone delaying emergency care for severe symptoms
- People self-prescribing without clinician supervision
- Pregnant or breastfeeding individuals unless explicitly cleared by a physician
Common Mistakes
Changing multiple variables in the first 72 hours
Why it matters: It becomes unclear what improved symptoms versus what worsened tolerance.
How to fix: Keep protocol stable, then change one element at a time with daily logging.
Using pain reduction alone as the recovery signal
Why it matters: Pain can improve before tissue capacity is restored, increasing reinjury risk.
How to fix: Pair symptom tracking with function markers like load tolerance and mobility quality.
FAQ
How soon should this protocol begin after injury?
Only after urgent issues are ruled out and a clinician confirms a recovery plan. Early structure helps, but emergency red flags always come first.
How long should the acute phase run?
Typically 2-4 weeks before transitioning to a lower-intensity maintenance plan, depending on injury severity and clinical follow-up.
What should I track each day?
Track pain, swelling, sleep, function, training capacity, and any adverse effects in one daily log.
Key Takeaways
- Treat this as a structured adjunct to medical care, not a replacement for diagnosis.
- Consistency and objective daily tracking matter more than constant protocol changes.
- Progression should be based on function and tolerance, not symptom relief alone.
Why This Stack Works
BPC-157 should be initiated as early as possible after injury for maximum cytoprotective effect on damaged tissue and vessels. TB-500 reduces inflammatory cascade acuteness and begins smooth healing. LL-37 provides antimicrobial protection against wound infection while modulating innate immunity. Thymosin Alpha-1 prevents infection-induced immune suppression common in trauma. NAD+ provides the cellular energy substrate depleted by injury-induced oxidative stress, supporting rapid mitochondrial recovery in damaged tissue.
Clinical Research
No clinical references were provided for this stack yet.
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Medical disclaimer: This protocol is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before starting any peptide protocol.
Free Peptide Guide
Acute Injury & Emergency Recovery Protocol PDF
Daily schedule, recovery checkpoints, safety flags, and practical adjustment rules in one quick reference.
Free access. No spam. This form sends the shared peptide guide that is live today.