Peptalk: Peptides Unpacked

#15 Your Bloodwork Can Point To The Right Peptides And Help You Feel Better, Faster

Dr. Kylie Burton & Jessica Briecke

Tired of being told your labs are “normal” while you still feel off? This is one of our favorite episodes as we turn normal labs into a goldmine of real answers - then share the peptide that helps resolve what your labs show! 

So grab your labs and take notes. You'll be able to identify what peptides are right for you simply by using the blood work your doctor has already ordered. 

Here's the goodies contained within this episode: 

  • Why traditional ranges were built to catch disease, not to measure how well you function. 
  • How functional lab ranges can finally guide you to targeted peptide therapies that deliver real results. 
  • From simplifying protocols to speeding up healing, we share the exact markers we watch and the peptide stacks that reliably move them.
  • Metabolic health: fasting glucose and A1C set the stage for choosing GLP-1 and GIP agonists that tame cravings, enhance insulin signaling, and help break plateaus. 
  • Gut repair using total protein and globulin as leaky gut clues, and explain why the BPC-157 plus TB-500 “Wolverine” combo rapidly seals the lining and calms reactivity. 
  • Liver stress shows up in AST and ALT, so we outline when glutathione peptides and NAD+ can support detox capacity, hormone balance, and clearer skin. 
  • The iron panel as a window into mitochondrial strain and show how methylene blue, NAD+, and methylcobalamin can lift cellular energy without guesswork.
  • Autoimmunity? What's the peptide option for it and how does it show up in regular blood work? 
  • Vitamin D targets that actually correlate with feeling better, and why thymosin alpha-1 helps recalibrate immune tone. 
  • You’ll also hear what many clinicians observe with GLP-1: antibody levels often improve as metabolic inflammation eases. 

If you’ve stacked supplements without lasting relief, this approach replaces confusion with clarity—mapping standard bloodwork to a small, potent peptide plan that’s easier to follow, often less expensive, and faster to show progress.

Ready to turn your labs into action? Press play, take notes, and share this with someone who’s stuck between “not sick” and truly well. 

If you loved what you learned, please leave a review and share this to help others discover the show so they too, can cut through the noise of peptides and get the truth. 

Want to connect more with the hosts? We'd love it! Connect with Jess at B2BwithJess.com/peptides or on Instagram @JessB_LMT_NC. Connect with Dr. Kylie at her other podcast Unshakeable Brain.

Ready to explore peptide therapy for yourself? Visit the company we recommend for advanced peptide therapy and one-on-one support at drkylieburton.com

Want to offer peptide therapy in your business? Whether you're adding it to your existing practice or building something new, learn how to get started—and how we'll help you make the sales and marketing much easier—at drkylieburton.com

Legal Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new health protocol. Dr. Kylie Burton and Jessica Briecke are affiliates and may receive compensation for referrals. Individual results may vary.

You have the science. You have the tools. Now it's time to take the next step.

This is PepTalk: Peptides Unpacked—science made simple, results made real.

SPEAKER_00:

Peptides are powerful and often misunderstood. And we are here to change that. I'm Dr. Kylie Burton. And I'm Jessica Brickie. This is pep talk. Peptides unpacked. Science made simple. Results made real. Before we go any further, I want to start with an important fact because this sets the stage for everything we're about to talk about. Traditional lab ranges were never designed to help you feel your best. They were created decades ago by looking at large populations and asked who asked one primary question. At what point does disease become obvious? So when you're told your labs are normal, what that really means is you don't fit criteria for a diagnosis. Not that your body is functioning well. You just don't fit the diagnosis yet. The gap between not sick and actually feeling good is where so many people live. And that's exactly why functional lab interpretation exists.

SPEAKER_01:

And that right there explains why so many people just feel awful, all while being told that everything looks fine. So this episode is honestly a full circle moment for me. I'm so excited about what we're about to do. I have used functional labs myself for years, personally and professionally. And that wasn't always the case. Like a lot of practitioners, I started off working from a symptom experience long supplement list kind of a base. And then years ago, I met Kylie through a supplement company that we were both using in their Facebook support group. And at the time, I didn't really understand a thing about using labs because with the training that I had, that wasn't something that we were talking about at the time. Now it's it's definitely part of that curriculum that I was in and everybody's doing it. So I didn't really understand it at the time, but I met Kylie, who was teaching all of us practitioners in the group how to use functional labs to interpret them and build a protocol with supplements around that space. And then Kylie went on to write her book.

SPEAKER_00:

It's now unshakable brain.

SPEAKER_01:

That is it the same book and you've ch you've put all that.

SPEAKER_00:

Like if you want to get into the nitty-gritty about the labs, um, I just don't go into the peptides here inside the book. So the lab, the book will teach you how to read your labs, come here for how to deal with it regarding peptides. So we'll get into this. But the treatment plan that I used to use was like six months, maybe even nine months or 12 months, depending on the scenario. And now it's like, hmm, you might need this one peptide stacked with this second peptide, maybe a third peptide. And it's all dependent upon labs. But my whole philosophy has always been how do we figure out what is the best case to get you from point A to point B? Because so many times we get told, my labs are normal. Then you're like, well, why do I feel like this? And then we trust a functional medicine doctor or practitioner or health professional, and then they put us on this$10,000 functional medicine plan, and they put 20 capsules in front of us every single day of supplements that are supposed to be helping. And then we go back to them the next yeah, the big they go back to them the next visit and they change them. Oh, now we need supplements to fix the side effects of the supplements. I had to figure out a method so that someone walked in or they saw me over Zoom and they're like, okay, I'm feeling like this. I want to feel like this. I've tried this, this, this, this, this. I might have felt better a little bit somewhere in between, but it really didn't get me to my end result that I wanted. I didn't, I might have had a little bit of a health upgrade, but I want a big health upgrade because I'm down here at the bottom of the totem pole.

SPEAKER_01:

So I had to figure out I think I'm a perfect example of what you're you're explaining, Kylie, because I doing what I do, you know, try to self-treat. I've worked with a lot of really incredible practitioners over the years, but having had multiple autoimmune conditions, myself and Lyme and mold and stress, like all of us do, like I have constantly been the person who is doing this protocol and this protocol and this protocol. And I don't know that I have ever gotten myself back to this place of feeling 100% like me, like my body was cooperating, like it was doing all of the things that it should be doing. And there really wasn't any room for me to fix diet was good, lifestyle is good, stress management's good, sleep's good, you know, all the foundational pieces that a lot of people are missing, they were all there. Looking at my labs on paper, for me, there was nowhere else to go. So when you needed to come up with a new plan for people that maybe weren't progressing with their supplement plan, I'm a perfect example of the success of peptides. And now you've come up with this way to simplify for people to look at their labs now and say, oh, this peptide might be.

SPEAKER_00:

So now it's it's blood work and peptides. It's amazing. Brilliant. Let me let me just give you a little tidbit of what we're about to discuss. Okay. So inside the CBC with differential, we have a marker, two of them actually, called the neutrophils and the lymphocytes. In previous conversations, the treatment plan for this would be like, okay, if it's the one-to-one ratio, and that means we're dealing with some type of autoimmune, then we're gonna look at we've got to destroy the infections, then we've got to rebuild it all, rebuild the gut and the lining and the microbiome. And it would take a good, you know, six months for this with the supplement regimen. At least. At least, yes. And that's to just based upon what I was seeing in the labs. That doesn't mean that they're gonna feel XYZ better in the six months. It's gonna be a work in progress. But now I'm looking at it and I think one-to-one ratio thymus and alpha one BPC 157. That's it.

SPEAKER_01:

And they're gonna come back from whatever their symptoms are so much faster than all these stages of protocols that we would bring to people through. That doesn't mean that there aren't still some things that need to be addressed outside of the peptides because that still probably exists for some people, but largely we just need to knock down inflammation, we need to heal soft tissue, we need to get the immune cells doing what they're doing. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

And rebuilding the gut lining. Right. Because leaky gut, hello, BPC 157. Right. So the way I've traditionally taught labs remains very similar as far as like, okay, if you're outside of this range, you're going that that means this. The treatment plan is now upgraded immensely. So say you're taking$400 a month in supplements, pretty standard, I think. And you're dealing with$350 to$400 a month in cost. And you can now switch over to BPC 157, which are capsules or injections if you'd so choose.

SPEAKER_01:

But the capsule response is going to be much less than a sub Q response. Well, I'm taking capsules, so we'll see, we'll see how you do it.

SPEAKER_00:

Um, but if you're a health professional listening to this and you are like, I need to enter this new period of time, this new way we do functional medicine, this new way we do peptide therapy, it's no different than hormone therapy. It's just now we can replace these extensive plans with simplicity and get so much better results in a faster manner. So when we're talking about these labs today in this particular episode, and you're thinking, Kylie, I am I've been taking this in the path of the show.

SPEAKER_01:

But I think it's important for us to just mention to people what is a functional lab versus a traditional label lab, because maybe people don't understand what we're talking about there.

SPEAKER_00:

Yep. Okay, so let's just use the thyroid marker for example, because everybody knows TSH, mostly everybody. Um, TSH is the one marker that doctors take for thyroid. Now, mind you, on any given lab panel, your TSH is gonna be between anywhere between 0.5 and 5.5. That's the optimal range. Now, if you think about it, like, all right, I want to find my favorite restaurant somewhere between California and New York. Good luck. That's what that range means. Now, a functional range says, okay, we might not have a diagnosis yet, but we're still feeling like we got all the thyroid symptoms. That's gonna be outside of the range 1.8 and three. Some people will say they want less than two. Just depends on where you're at in this spectrum. But it's a much narrower range than the optimal ranges are which we see regularly in labs. So that's the difference between the functional range and the optimal range. We're going to be using functional ranges in this discussion, which are going to look different than your optimal ranges that you see on the labs your doctor ordered.

SPEAKER_01:

Right. When everything comes back in the green and they say there's nothing wrong with your labs. We're saying when they come back, we're we're not looking for you to be so sick that you're in the red range on those traditional labs. We're looking for you to be in the green range where your body's working and feeling at its best, that tight range in the middle. Once you get outside of that range, those are your warning signs. That's that time when, hey, pay attention, we need a little support here before you get outside of that traditional value, which is a much higher, wider, broader range, which is what you're what you're saying. And we're sick, we're really sick at that point. So let's keep it optimal where the body's functioning, doing its absolute best. That's what we're looking for. That tighter inside the traditional lab range.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, and the the little phrase we've used in the past on this episode is live better longer. So if we want to continue with that live better longer concept, we're gonna use these ranges, not the optimal ranges as you'll find in your labs. We need to dive in.

SPEAKER_01:

What do you think, pilot? We should uh have people at this point get out a pen and paper and write down a couple of notes for themselves, and we'll take a we'll just take a few hot markers that they might be familiar with and say, this is what could potentially help you or benefit you. Not diagnosing you and not giving you a protocol that's going to fix your problem. I want to be careful how we word it. For educational purposes only. Really gonna take you long. There we go.

SPEAKER_00:

Summarize it pretty simply. Um, now I do have a guide that you can grab if you're looking for, like, okay, based upon how I feel, based upon my blood work, what are the best peptides for me? Uh, if you're a health practitioner and you want to incorporate these peptides into your space, and you're wondering what's the fast track on helping people understand these peptides and use the one that's correct for them. And I'm gonna just caveat by saying times have changed. Methods that previously were used need to be upgraded. So if you've heard me before, you need to upgrade the treatment methods and the treatment plans. And we can all thank each other because we're gonna get better faster and we're gonna we're gonna get our patients better faster. So, okay, the first one. Um blood sugar? Sound good?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, let's talk about that one. I think that's an easy one to go over.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay, so we're talking about blood sugar and glucose. Now, I'm gonna say the reference range that I would use. People who are in the keto space or the carnivore space, they might use a different range. But for functional range method for me, um, it's gonna be between 85 and 99. And we're talking on your blood glucose. So when you go get your blood drawn, it is the blood sugar inside your blood at that moment. Okay. If your hemoglobin A1C, that is your blood sugar over time. And at 5.6% right now, you're gonna get diagnosed with pre-diabetes. Is it 6.0 or 6.5 now? They keep changing it because they want to make it so seem like we're healthier than we've got.

SPEAKER_01:

5.6 and then 6.5, that's yeah, they yeah, they keep changing that a little bit, but 6.5 is kind of that like, okay, we're out of the pre-diabetic stage. We've gone into this stage now. Also, I think it's worth mentioning that when these labs are pulled, um, make sure that you're doing them fasting. That matters. That's gonna influence what the at least the glucose number is gonna look like. It may not influence the A1C that much, but it'll influence that glucose number.

unknown:

Right.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay. So your now treatment option, one of the best treatment options, I might say, are your GLP1 and your GIPs. So when you think about blood sugar, blood glucose, and you're seeing your numbers elevated on the labs, you want to think blood sugar and metabolism, support for that is GLP1 and GIP. Okay, that's pretty standard.

SPEAKER_01:

Let's pretty standard. I think people understand that. I also want to say long-term use versus how long, you know, people ask all the time, I'm how long do I have to be on this? Well, everybody's a little bit different. It depends on how metabolically busted you are. If you've listened to our other episodes, you understand that. So some people might just need to kind of get this back in order, clean up the house, and everything will be good. Give your body the spark, it'll be short-term use. Some people might need a little bit for the rest of their life, some people might need to cycle it. So everybody's gonna be a little bit different when it comes to GLP1 use, depending on your metabolic state. But those markers Kylie was just talking about the A1C and the fasting, again, fasting glucose, those are the numbers you're gonna look at to determine if this GLP, although it does many things, will help you if those numbers are out of range.

SPEAKER_00:

Next one we're gonna talk about are leaky gut markers. These are total protein and globulin markers, and these are found inside a metabolic panel. So if you're like grabbing your pencil and your paper or even pulling out your phone and putting it in your phone notes, whatever however you want to do it, you're looking at total protein. The number is 6.9 to 7.4. Let me say that one more time. Total protein is found inside your metabolic panel. The functional range is 6.9 to 7.4. If you are outside of that range, think leaky gut. Globulin is also associated with leaky gut. The number for globulin is 2.4 to 2.8. So if you fall outside of that range, 2.4 to 2.8 for globulin, think leaky gut. These are correlated to leaky gut, they're not diagnosing, they're correlated too. Okay. Now your treatment for this is going to be the BPC 157-TB500. It is going to zip up that gut lining better than anything else on the market.

SPEAKER_01:

And fast. So this combination is nicknamed the Wolverine. So anybody that's a Marvel fan knows that the Wolverine could, you know, heal in the blink of an eye. They have nicknamed this combination the Wolverine because it is that fast. I've personally experienced it. I can say that is absolutely true. It is mind-blowing how quick it can be. Um, we're talking sub-Q, that speed, when you're taking it sublingually and it has to go through the digestive track, that response is going to be a little bit different. Um, but there is the option. There is the option. Um, but it is quick. It is powerful. So when Kylie says it'll zip up your gut lining, man, this is where it's at. So those are great markers to consider when you're looking at your labs. Hey, this is gonna help me. I've got this here. It's not the end all, though, is what you're saying, right?

SPEAKER_00:

I mean, when you look at labs, you're gonna find multiple different markers, and it's just like a peptide stack almost.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

Um, but if you're to start off with one thing, like we've mentioned before in previous episodes, it's this. Yeah. This is the one thing that you want to start off with. It's associated with the leaky gut food sensitivities. Yeah. Great for this. This agreed.

SPEAKER_01:

Um, I just had a uh somebody actually just reach out to me over the weekend and she is still struggling. She has done so many amazing things to heal her body. Um, and yet she still struggles with gluten. And she is not a celiac, right? So she does not have that actual autoimmune marker for for gluten. Um, but she just can't, she just can't digest it. So we talked at great lengths about this. She's still had experiencing some bloating and all that. I said, this is the one. This is the this is the peptide that you need to do probably for a month or two and see what happens and probably zip up that gut. And guess what? You can probably enjoy your sourdough without without having a problem like you were, which is exciting.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. So those are our great markers found inside your metabolic panel. Let's just go through, you know, two more markers in your metabolic panel because they're associated with your detox system, specifically your liver. And you know, back in the day, I remember when I first got introduced to enemas, coffee enemas. My favorite. I'm like, what? I love that people do that. And it's to stimulate the liver's glutathione production. Yep. Okay. We're talking AST and ALT here. The functional range that I would like to. See people in within is 10 to 18 for both of them. So if you fall outside of 10 to 18, which I've never seen anybody less than 10, I've seen people in the hundreds and the two hundreds and the three hundreds, and you're like, dang, that liver is overburdened. The detox system is really struggling. What's the peptide? Can you take a guess?

SPEAKER_01:

Well, I'm glutathione. I'm gonna say glutathione. We're gonna stimulate what we're doing with that coffee enema. So those that are afraid of coffee enemas, there's another way. Me.

SPEAKER_00:

I have not done coffee enema. I never want to, but I will take some glutathione peptide for sure. You can always combine that one with the NAD plus too for the cellular impact, the energy support. Um, but if you're like, my liver is really struggling, my kidneys are struggling, we've got multiple kidney markers within the metabolic panel as well. Uh, if you're looking at being the best version of you, glutathione. And we're talking like the real stuff here. Mm-hmm.

SPEAKER_01:

So I want to pause for one second and just tell people why this is so freaking important, right? So the liver has over 500 jobs that it has to do in the body. Most people just think, oh, it's detox, it's I drank too much alcohol and now I've got, or I took too much Tylenol, I have to, you know, put it through my liver. Yes, that's true. But the hormones, oh my gosh, they are there's so many hormone jobs that are related to this. Also, people that have a history of gallbladder issues, gallstones, you've had your gallbladder removed. I I'm one of those 27 years ago, I had my gallbladder removed because I didn't know then what I know now. If I if if I had that situation now, I'd know how to heal that. But if you are somebody that has struggled with stones or you've had your gallbladder removed, guess what? You just remove the symptom. You didn't fix the problem. The problem goes back to your liver. So the liver is struggling. One of the ways that we can support that is exactly what Kylie is saying right here: support it by increasing our glutathione. It's one of many ways that we can support that liver function. So freaking important. So on top of your liver markers, there are things that have happened to many, many people that we need to be considering this peptide. Correct.

SPEAKER_00:

I think about skin issues. Acne. Yeah, teenage acne, adult acne, that's a great thing to add in. But if you're looking at labs specifically, you're like, based upon my labs, what do I need? Well, if your ALT and AST is above 18, especially if it's getting above 25, uh, let's definitely help out that nerve, that liver and the detox system. Okay. Now, here's something that I love. I'm not going to get in the details, but when you think about the iron panel, you're looking at serum iron, you're looking at ferritin, you're thinking TIBC. Now, serum iron is the amount of iron you have in your blood at the time the blood was drawn. Ferritin is your levels, like your long-term reserves. So if you're not like a red meat eater, we don't have a problem with that at my house. But if you're struggling to get iron, your body will pull from the reserves, and every single cell in your body needs iron. Okay. Now, be outside of the iron panel specifically telling us about our iron status, it gives us a lot of information about our cells and how healthy our cells are. And cells are the very basic structure of our bodies. Everything we have is made up of cells. So if we heal our cells, what can come from it? When it comes to peptide recommendations for healing your cells, let's think methylene blue, NAD plus, and our favorite BPC157 TB500 combo. That's the iron panel. Um, scrolling down my PDF here, we're looking at vitamin D. Now I'm gonna talk about this for more, a few more minutes in the lipid panel, which I just wanted to brush by to show you how cool these can be and how tremendously impactful to our health based upon our labs these peptides have. The power of peptides. On a given lab, Jess, we both know that the vitamin D level for normal is anywhere between 32 and 100. Crazy. What a ridiculous pathetic. If somebody is has a vitamin D level of 38, they absolutely feel like crap. If it's in the 40s, they feel like crap. If it's in the 50s, they feel like crap. Maybe if we're getting, you know, above 75. Now we're like, okay, my vitamin D is pretty good. But then the worst part, in my opinion, is people freak out if it gets over 100. Physicians immediately stop someone from taking vitamin D. And I'm like, I I had a patient one time, major, major long chronic health problems. Her vitamin D level was at 186, and her doctor like panicked. She stopped taking her vitamin D based upon the recommendations, and all of her autoimmune symptoms came back. So I don't worry about a high level. In my opinion, I want vitamin D to be over 80. No cap. Vitamin D over 80. Now you can go take vitamin D. There's a lot of people who say, well, I took vitamin D, even my stellar three-month protocol that I used to always talk about. But now I'm gonna be like, all right, vitamin D is great. Do you know what's even better? Thymus and alpha one.

SPEAKER_01:

I love that peptide. I love that we can talk about that peptide. I love that we have a lot that it's available now.

SPEAKER_00:

We're like, yes.

SPEAKER_01:

It's available.

unknown:

Okay.

SPEAKER_00:

Thank goodness. Speaking of thymus and alpha one, what if you've been diagnosed with Hashimoto's or you have antibodies?

SPEAKER_01:

How many people have? I mean, you can't cast the net and catch, you know, a dozen people that are right in your surrounding area that have a thyroid issue.

SPEAKER_00:

Antibodies, period, across the board. ANA, whatever it is, if it says has letters and it says antibodies, you have a red flag. Now there's kind of a twofold aspect with antibodies. If you're above zero, you have antibodies and your immune system is starting to fight. It's responded, right? So you can wait for it to hit the threshold in which you can then receive the diagnosis, or you can just act, be proactive about it, and not even wait until it hits some threshold. But if you want to hit the threshold, the TPO antibodies for thyroid are above 34. If you want the diagnosis or look that way, the TG antibodies are above one. Okay. Autoimmune, what do we think? Thymus and alpha one. Now here's something even cooler that I love to mention on, we love to mention on this podcast. I talked to some practitioners when I created this Wikipedia, this guide, this pet blood work and peptides guide. I sent it out to them to give their opinions, what they thought, especially ones who have been using peptides in their clinic. And the one said, you need to add GLP1 to your thyroid antibodies. Anything I've used, anytime someone gets on a GLP1, it's like a bonus side effect. Their antibodies drop.

SPEAKER_01:

It's proven right there in all their labs. We're just scratching the surface of what we know to be true about these peptides, as far as like what we can say they are doing. Like we can see these results in the people that we're working with. We know that we're not allowed to say a lot of those things of what they're doing.

unknown:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

But we know that it's happening. So I think as time goes on, we are just we are going to be able to say this definitely does X, Y, Z, whereas right now we can say it does X and Y. We're gonna be able we're gonna be able to say the whole alphabet, in my opinion, when it comes to these subtitles. They are it.

SPEAKER_00:

Okay. So let's just drop with one little piece left. I could go into a whole nother episode on the CBC with differential, but let's talk about the pieces that I don't really talk about. And that's the red red blood cell.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

The hemoglobin and the hematocrit and the MCV and the MCHC. I'm not gonna get into the ranges for these because you need to have the guide for it. They're different for females and males. But when people say, I've had, oh, just left my mind, the gene for MTHFR. Uh I've been tested for MTHFR. I'm positive. Or, you know, I don't methylate my B vitamins. All that means is that your body consumes, when you consume a B vitamin, your body has to go through this process to convert it into a usable B vitamin. We are very, we want that to convert because it's required to take your food and convert it into energy. Right. If you're thinking I want more energy, well, B12 methylcobalamin is available as a peptide. NAD plus. Those will be my two recommendations if you're looking at your red blood cells and you're thinking, especially if they're on the elevated of the part of the range, which is an indicator of your B12 or your vitamin B status, get yourself some B12 methylcobal cobalamine, which is already methylated. Hence why it's called methylcobalamine.

SPEAKER_01:

Meaning we can use it immediately. The body's able to use it immediately, right? Without going through that whole complicated Krebs cycle. Yes. Which is a nightmare to extend it.

SPEAKER_00:

And so many people are taking, you know, methylated B vitamins. Yeah. Because they've noticed it makes a big difference. So let's switch over to something even more powerful. Yeah. Get it straight to our cells and let them do their jobs.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

So I just wanted to drop those few pieces about labs and blood work and peptides because what we've known is one thing. What we know moving forward in this new world of medicine with peptide therapy is a whole nother. And it's such a crazy, amazing experience to be part of the journey. So welcome aboard. You're part of the journey. Whether you're looking at taking peptides or whether you're looking for incorporating peptides, we're glad you've been on this journey with us and continue to be on the journey with us.

SPEAKER_01:

Mm-hmm. Listen, in my three plus decades in wellness, I don't think I've ever been more excited than I am working with peptides now. Just adding this excited either. I mean, truly. When when you first taught me labs, I was super excited, right? Because I thought, oh my gosh, there's another way. Like I can really get detailed on what people's body, what they're saying specifically, instead of throwing spaghetti at the wall and trying to guess what, you know, spending a lot of money to, you know, this symptom could be for a ton of different reasons. Let's keep trying, right? So now you bring labs into the picture and the guesswork is gone, and that was so helpful. However, peptides and seeing real results and how easy we can help people get well, I have I have never been more excited. I've experienced it myself in my own body. And now to be able to share it with people, how they can do it safely, how they can do it with their blood work. This is really good stuff. And what Kylie has done with this program that she's she's got for using your labs, whether you are an individual, I'm assuming, and I I don't want to speak for you, but I'm assuming whether you're an individual and you're looking for help or you're a practitioner that's looking for help, Kylie's gonna be able to help you use these tools.

SPEAKER_00:

I sent this guide over to you when I first created it, and your reply was capital OMG. That guide is brilliant. And I'm just like, I'm over here thinking, you know, what we've like I've mentioned before, like what we've been doing is so cool, but yet what we can do now is just it's raised the bar. Really has. And it's not just for us health practitioners, but it's raised the bar for people to feel better. And that's ultimately what we're all in the game for. Yeah, we're all wanting to help people feel better, which is why we even hit record on this podcast to begin with. So it's to help more people feel better with this knowledge. And now we can take blood work as we've previously known it and used it and correlate it to peptide therapy and get so much better results faster. I would, I dare say cheaper too.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, yeah, and also not$3,600 cheaper, like your friend with the peptides, but but when you think about people that have done supplemental protocols, and again, I do want to say they have their space, like there are things that are very supportive in supplements. So this is not about bashing supplements in any way, shape, or form. It's just that there are other things that we can we know we can do to support you for quicker results and more. I won't I don't I think permanent might be a way, but I don't know if that's appropriate. But definitely a stronger response to healing with these peptides quicker. So when you spend years, which people do, protocol after protocol, hundreds of dollars every month doing this, that, and the other thing. And I I have been that person. Um the investment here is so much less. So much less. And once you start using peptides, you'll think, where has this been my whole life? Tell you where it's been. The medical community doesn't want us healthy because they don't make money.

SPEAKER_00:

The pharmacy are trying to uh claim their stamp on this as well.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

So be as we've mentioned previously, like don't just go out and grab any supplement that Facebook ads send you or whatever you search for. Like, you need the legit stuff if you want the legit results. Yeah. And that's the bottom line. So, okay. Finishing up here, if you just learned something that you didn't know before, please share this podcast. Uh there's somebody in your space that you could influence because you found us, so help them find it too. And we would be grateful for it. We would also be grateful if you would leave a review on whatever podcast platform you're using. Those reviews not only help people learn about the podcast and the results of listening, but it helps spread this podcast to more individuals organically. And if you want to learn more about me, you can find me at drkylieburton.comslash peptides and my other podcast called Unshakable Brain. If you want this blood work guide, just go to drylyburton.com slash peptides and I will map you through how to get there. I haven't figured that out at the time of this recording yet, so just start there. Start there and we'll figure out how to get this uh guide to you. Um, it may be free, it might not be. So we'll see what I've decided. Moving on in the future, it is definitely worth paying for, uh, no matter who you are, what your goal is to use with it, because this is something that's going to change the future of how we read blood work and how we provide these peptide therapies. Oh, it's worth it.

SPEAKER_01:

So it's it's worth it. I I I've seen the guide, you guys. It's good. It's good, it's brilliant, and you'll learn an awful lot about your body in Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

And that just comes from regular blood work. Whatever blood work your doctors already ordered, that's what you use. So that's a cool part.

SPEAKER_01:

All right, Jess, where they can like where can they find you? Yeah, they can find me on Instagram. That is Jess B underscore L M T underscore N C. And you can find me in my website, b2b with Jess.com backslash peptides. You can find me on either of those places. We'll see you in the next episode of Pep Talk, Peptides Unpacked. See ya.