Spinal Cord Injury Recovery Protocol
Spinal Cord Injury Recovery Protocol framework focused on consistent execution, practical monitoring, and safer progression.
A neuroprotective and neurorestorative peptide protocol for individuals recovering from incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI). Targets secondary injury mechanisms: neuroinflammation, axonal degeneration, demyelination, and vascular disruption to preserve neurological function and promote sensorimotor recovery.
Who it's for
Use this as an educational framework with clinical oversight. Keep timing consistent, track response daily, and change one variable at a time after trend review. Pair protocol use with sleep, nutrition, and recovery fundamentals.
Free Peptide Guide
Spinal Cord Injury Recovery Protocol Protocol PDF
Schedule template, practical checkpoints, common mistakes, and safety guidance in one quick reference.
Free access. No spam. This form sends the shared peptide guide that is live today.
Protocol at a Glance
Cycle Duration
Acute phase: 12 weeks intensive; maintenance: ongoing 3x/week; Cerebrolysin in quarterly 4-week cycles
Target Audience
Adults with incomplete spinal cord injury (ASIA B/C/D) under physiatrist and neurologist supervision
| Compound | Dose | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Cerebrolysin Multi-neurotrophic support for axonal sprouting and synaptic reorganization post-SCI | 10 mL | Daily for 4 weeks, then 3x/week |
| BPC-157 Spinal vasculature repair via VEGF and neuroinflammation reduction in injury zone | 500 mcg | Twice daily |
| Thymosin Beta-4 Oligodendrocyte precursor differentiation and axonal growth cone extension promotion | 2 mg | Daily |
| IGF-1 LR3 Neurite outgrowth stimulation, motor neuron survival, and Schwann cell remyelination | 50 mcg | Daily |
| TB-500 Angiogenesis and actin-based repair in ischemic spinal injury penumbra | 5 mg | Twice weekly |
| NAD+ Mitochondrial bioenergetics restoration and PARP-mediated DNA repair in spinal neurons | 1000 mg | Daily |
Free Peptide Guide
Spinal Cord Injury Recovery Protocol Protocol PDF
Schedule template, practical checkpoints, common mistakes, and safety guidance in one quick reference.
Free access. No spam. This form sends the shared peptide guide that is live today.
Daily Schedule
Morning
Baseline review and first execution window
Log sleep, energy, and tolerance; complete planned Cerebrolysin timing if scheduled.
Midday
Adherence and symptom check
Review hydration, workload, and side effects before any changes.
Evening
Recovery closeout and next-day setup
Record outcomes, maintain schedule consistency, and prepare next-day protocol.
Safety
- Escalating side effects or new concerning symptoms require prompt clinical review.
- Avoid abrupt multi-compound changes during unstable periods.
- Maintain regular follow-up with a licensed clinician throughout the cycle.
Not appropriate for unsupervised use or as a replacement for diagnosis and medical care. Use only within a clinician-guided plan.
Who should avoid
- Anyone using this protocol without qualified medical supervision
- People with unstable medical or psychiatric conditions without specialist guidance
- Pregnant or breastfeeding individuals unless explicitly cleared by a physician
Common Mistakes
Changing multiple variables at once
Why it matters: This makes it hard to identify what improved outcomes versus what increased side effects.
How to fix: Keep one-variable changes per review cycle and log response for several days.
Ignoring adherence and recovery fundamentals
Why it matters: Protocol effectiveness drops when sleep, nutrition, and routine consistency are unstable.
How to fix: Protect daily anchors first, then optimize protocol details gradually.
FAQ
How long should Spinal Cord Injury Recovery Protocol run before reassessment?
A common window is Acute phase: 12 weeks intensive; maintenance: ongoing 3x/week; Cerebrolysin in quarterly 4-week cycles, with periodic review of tolerance and objective trends.
Can I increase complexity quickly for faster results?
Usually no. Safer optimization comes from staged changes and clear tracking.
What should I track each day?
Track schedule adherence, symptoms, sleep quality, and any adverse effects in one log.
Key Takeaways
- Consistency with Cerebrolysin + BPC-157 execution matters more than frequent protocol changes.
- Single-variable adjustments improve safety and decision quality.
- Objective daily tracking supports better long-term outcomes.
Why This Stack Works
Spinal cord injury involves a primary mechanical insult followed by devastating secondary injury — excitotoxicity, neuroinflammation, microvasculature disruption, and progressive axonal degeneration that expands the injury zone. Cerebrolysin provides multi-neurotrophic factor support (BDNF, NGF, NT-3) critical for axonal sprouting and synaptic reorganization below the injury level. BPC-157 promotes VEGF-mediated spinal vasculature repair, reduces neuroinflammation, and facilitates motor circuit reconnection. Thymosin Beta-4 drives oligodendrocyte precursor differentiation for remyelination of surviving axons and promotes actin-based axonal growth cone extension. IGF-1 LR3 stimulates neurite outgrowth, promotes motor neuron survival, and activates Schwann cell-mediated remyelination in the injured cord. TB-500 provides actin-based cellular repair and angiogenesis in the ischemic injury penumbra. NAD+ restores mitochondrial bioenergetics in metabolically compromised spinal neurons and reduces PARP-mediated DNA fragmentation.
Clinical Research
No clinical references were provided for this stack yet.
More Recovery & Repair Stacks
ALS & Motor Neuron Disease Supportive Care
A neuroprotective peptide protocol for ALS and motor neuron disease, targeting mitochondrial function, neuroinflammation, and remaining motor neuron survival without interfering with standard-of-care riluzole therapy.
Acute Injury & Emergency Recovery Protocol
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.
Advanced Gut Restoration Protocol
The most comprehensive gut healing protocol, targeting intestinal permeability, mucosal growth, epithelial repair, and microbiome defense simultaneously. Suitable for celiac disease, post-antibiotic dysbiosis, IBD, short bowel syndrome, and chronic leaky gut.
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
Spinal Cord Injury Recovery Protocol Protocol PDF
Schedule template, practical checkpoints, common mistakes, and safety guidance in one quick reference.
Free access. No spam. This form sends the shared peptide guide that is live today.