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Research Use Only. Not for human or veterinary use. Third-party HPLC tested · Batch-verifiable COAs.
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Why Aren't My Peptides Working? Research Variables That Matter

6 min read

“Why isn't this working?” is a common research frustration, and the answer is rarely mysterious. In most cases, one of a small set of variables is off — material, preparation, storage, or study design. Here's how to troubleshoot systematically. Laboratory reference only; this is about research methodology, not any human or veterinary use.

1. Material — is it what it claims, and how much?

Start at the source. Unverified identity or low net peptide content means your effective amount is lower than assumed. Check the COA: mass-spec identity, HPLC purity, and net content. A vial that's 80% peptide behaves differently than one that's 95%.

2. Preparation — reproducible and intact?

Concentration errors and rough handling (shaking, wrong solvent) quietly change everything downstream. If your preparation isn't reproducible, your results won't be either.

3. Storage — degraded before use?

Warm storage, repeated freeze-thaw, and exposure to light or air degrade peptide. A compound that sat reconstituted at room temperature for days may simply be spent.

4. Study design — are you measuring what you think?

Finally, the model itself: concentration range, timing, controls, and endpoints all shape what you observe. Uncontrolled variables are the most common reason a real effect hides.

Troubleshoot in this order — material → preparation → storage → design. Most “it's not working” cases resolve at one of the first three.

Frequently Asked Questions

Could it just be a bad batch?

Possibly — which is exactly why you start with the COA and material verification. But more often the variable is preparation, storage, or study design rather than the product itself.

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