Research library
The research library
Every primary source behind a claim on this site, tier-graded for provenance and tagged for the strength of the evidence it carries.
- Sources indexed
- 221
- Peptides covered
- 44
- Tier 1 share
- 0%
- Matching filter
- 3
F·Filter
Reset allT2·Peer-secondary literature
Peer-reviewed reviews and cohort/observational work — context, not bedrock.
1 source
- 2022Reviewsuggestive
A central role for amyloid fibrin microclots in long COVID/PASC: origins and therapeutic implications
Kell DB, Laubscher GJ, Pretorius E · Biochemical Journal
The synthesis paper that frames amyloid fibrin microclots as a central mechanism of long COVID/PASC symptomatology — hypothesis-grade rather than validated mechanism, and the framework that underwrites the coagulation-focused therapeutic rationale that recurs in long-COVID communities.
T3·Expert-primary work
Domain-expert primary sources outside the journal pipeline — lectures, podcasts, position papers.
2 sources
- 2026Reviewsuggestive
Should Bremelanotide Be Considered for the Treatment of Sexual Arousal and Desire Disorders in Men?
Pfaus JG, Balon R · Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology
James Pfaus — the bench scientist whose preclinical female-rat solicitation work anchored bremelanotide's FDA approval for HSDD in premenopausal women — argues with Robert Balon in JCP that the male-population evidence has matured enough to justify clinical consideration of bremelanotide for male hypoactive sexual desire disorder, despite the drug's current female-only label.
- 2013Reviewsuggestive
Mechanism of biological activity of short peptides: cell penetration and epigenetic regulation of gene expression
Khavinson VKh, Solov'ev AYu, Tarnovskaya SI, +1 · Biology Bulletin Reviews
The Khavinson program's 2013 mechanism review — its published argument for how a dipeptide or tetrapeptide could cross the cell membrane, cross the nuclear envelope, and reach a specific promoter motif on DNA. The cell-penetration half of the story the companion 2013 Bull Exp Biol Med modeling paper leaves on the table.