KLOW Stack
Also known as: KPV + GHK-Cu + BPC-157 + TB-500 · KLOW protocol
An extended version of the Glow stack that adds KPV — a peptide discussed for inflammation and gut support — to GHK-Cu, BPC-157, and TB-500.
What's in the stack
Combined focus areas
Illustrative map of what this combination is most often discussed for. Relative emphasis only — not a measure of efficacy or a medical claim.
What is the KLOW stack?
KLOW is an extended version of the Glow stack. The name comes from its components: KPV, GHK-Cu (L… via "GHK"), BPC-157, and TB-500 — in practice, the Glow trio plus KPV, a peptide discussed for inflammation and gut support. It is also sold pre-mixed and appears in our library as KLOW.
Why the components are combined
It layers goals: GHK-Cu for skin and collagen, BPC-157 and TB-500 for recovery and tissue repair, and KPV for an anti-inflammatory and gut angle. The result is a broad "skin, gut, and recovery" stack — broad enough that tracking each piece matters more, not less.
Educational only — not medical advice
These are research peptides not approved for general human use, and stacking four compounds compounds the unknowns. Nothing here is a recommendation or dose. Consult a qualified healthcare provider and follow the laws in your area.
How to run and track the KLOW stack
Four compounds means four schedules, more injections to rotate, and more variables to untangle. Introduce them deliberately rather than all at once where you can, track each separately, and rotate sites carefully. Pair photos for the skin goal with a simple daily gut/comfort rating. Our stack guide covers how to keep a multi-compound protocol legible.
Track the KLOW Stack in LynkDose
With four compounds in play, track each one separately and rotate injection sites carefully. Pair with photos for the skin angle and a simple daily gut/comfort rating.
Deeper read: How to Build and Track a Peptide Stack
Not medical advice
This page is educational and does not recommend, prescribe, or dose any compound or combination. Many of these are research compounds not approved for general human use, and stacking changes risks. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider and follow the laws in your area.