What \u201cResearch Use Only\u201d Does\u2014and Does Not\u2014Mean
A research-use label describes intended laboratory use. It does not prove identity, purity, sterility, safety, legality of marketing claims, or suitability for people.
A research-use label describes intended laboratory use. It does not prove identity, purity, sterility, safety, legality of marketing claims, or suitability for people.
A practical framework for separating approved indications, human trial findings, preclinical hypotheses, and seller extrapolation.
Marketing patterns that should trigger deeper verification before trusting quality, regulatory, or health claims.
Why a cold pack, tracking number, or generic refrigeration chart does not establish product stability.
A detailed checklist for reviewing identity, purity, assay, batch matching, laboratory details, and missing quality tests.
What phase 1, 2, 3, and post-approval studies can\u2014and cannot\u2014tell you about a peptide candidate.
Why an approved active ingredient does not make every compounded vial, salt form, or research product FDA-approved.
A reader-focused checklist for spotting missing disclosures, unsupported claims, and potentially dangerous instruction content.