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BPC-157 Tracker for iPhone

OptiPin is a private BPC-157 tracker that turns a healing-peptide protocol into a clean, reviewable record. Log each dose, rotate injection sites, reconstitute lyophilized vials with the built-in calculator, note side effects and recovery, and track the Wolverine stack (BPC-157 + TB-500) as two clean entries - with a reminder when the next dose is due and a warning before a vial runs out. Everything stays on your device; no account, no cloud upload.

Status - research compound
Unapproved, WADA-banned, unregulated. BPC-157 is an unapproved research chemical - not approved by the FDA, EMA or any regulator. It has been on the WADA S0 prohibited list (banned for tested athletes) since January 2022, and there are no large human trials of it; its efficacy evidence is overwhelmingly from animal studies. Material sold today is unregulated for purity, sterility and dose accuracy. OptiPin is a tracking tool and does not endorse or facilitate obtaining it.

Track your BPC-157 on iPhone

Dose log with reminders, injection-site rotation, built-in vial reconstitution, side-effect and recovery logging, runout warnings and Wolverine-stack support - private and on-device. Free to start.

Download on the App Store
Class
Healing peptide
Route
SubQ / oral
Status
Research compound
Privacy
On-device

Why track BPC-157 at all

BPC-157 is a synthetic "body protection compound" pentadecapeptide studied for tendon, ligament and gut healing - and it is usually run daily, near an injury site, over a multi-week course. Because it ships as a lyophilized vial rather than a pre-filled pen, there are two extra things to keep straight that a notes app won't: the reconstitution math (vial size + water → syringe units, in micrograms) and which outcome you're actually tracking. A tracker makes both visible, and - since BPC-157 is unproven in humans - lets you tie a specific recovery metric (say, a tendon-pain score) to which week and which dose you were on, which is the only honest way to judge an unproven compound on yourself.

OptiPin handles the vial side natively - pick the compound, reconstitute, and every dose is logged in real units against a timeline you can actually read.

What the OptiPin BPC-157 tracker does

Dose log + reminders
Record each injection on a daily or per-protocol cadence and get reminded on the due day so a dose never slips.
Built-in reconstitution math
Pick BPC-157 and OptiPin converts vial size + water into exact syringe units in micrograms - no hand math.
Injection-site rotation
Track which site you used last so you can rotate consistently, including dosing near the area you care about.
Side-effect & symptom logging
Note any reactions and the specific outcome you care about, and see how they line up with each dose.
Recovery & weight notes (optional)
Log a recovery or pain score, body measurements or weight (or pull from Apple Health) over your dose timeline.
Vial runout warnings
Log the reconstituted vial and OptiPin estimates remaining doses and an empty date, warning before you run out.
CSV import & export
Bring an existing dose history in from a spreadsheet, or export your log to share with a clinician.

Running BPC-157 in the Wolverine stack alongside TB-500, or pairing it with GHK-Cu? OptiPin tracks each compound as its own entry on one timeline, with its own schedule, dose log and vial inventory. For the trial data, half-life and reconstitution math behind the molecule, see the BPC-157 reference.

Free dose tools for BPC-157

Calculators that pair with tracking - no app needed to use them:

One app for everything you're on

The real advantage of OptiPin is that BPC-157 doesn't live in isolation. If you're also running a recovery stack, a peptide, TRT or a supplement stack, all of it sits in one place with a single timeline and one set of insights - instead of fragmented across a notes file and your memory. That's the difference between logging a compound and actually seeing your protocol.

Not medical advice, not a dose, not a sourcing guide. BPC-157 is an unapproved research compound with little human safety data and is banned in tested sport. OptiPin records and reminds - it does not recommend a dose, a protocol, or whether to use BPC-157, and does not endorse obtaining research-chemical material. The reconstitution tools above are arithmetic for whatever a clinician specifies. We are not prescribers; discuss any peptide with a qualified clinician.
Start tracking today

Your BPC-157, on a timeline you control

Doses, site rotation, reconstitution, recovery, side effects and runout warnings - private, on-device, free to start.

Download on the App Store

FAQ

Is there an app to track BPC-157?

Yes - OptiPin. You log each injection, rotate sites, reconstitute lyophilized vials with the built-in calculator, record side effects and recovery, and get reminders plus runout warnings. It's on iPhone, stores data on-device and needs no account.

Is BPC-157 approved?

No. It's an unapproved research chemical - not approved by the FDA, EMA or any regulator - and has been on the WADA S0 prohibited list (banned for tested athletes) since January 2022. Material sold today is unregulated for purity, sterility and dose accuracy, and the human evidence is thin. See the BPC-157 reference.

Can OptiPin reconstitute BPC-157 vials?

Yes. BPC-157 ships as a lyophilized (freeze-dried) powder that must be reconstituted with bacteriostatic water; the built-in reconstitution calculator turns vial size and water volume into exact syringe units in micrograms (the same tool is free on the web). It's arithmetic only, not a dose recommendation.

Can it track the Wolverine / BPC-157 + TB-500 stack?

Yes. The community "Wolverine stack" pairs BPC-157 with TB-500. OptiPin tracks each compound separately - its own schedule, dose log and vial inventory - and the free peptide blend calculator handles the math if you run them combined. There are no human trials of the combination; both compounds are unapproved and WADA-banned.

Does it work offline and keep my data private?

Yes. Everything is stored on-device and works offline. There's no account and no required cloud sync, so your log isn't uploaded to a server.

Educational only, not medical advice. BPC-157 is an unapproved, investigational compound with minimal human safety data and is banned in tested sport. OptiPin is a tracking tool and does not provide dosing or treatment advice, nor endorse obtaining research-chemical material. Discuss any peptide with a qualified clinician.

Related

Running a recovery stack? OptiPin tracks BPC-157 next to the TB-500 tracker and GHK-Cu tracker on one timeline. · BPC-157 science · Peptide blend calculator · All peptides