Summary: The recovery stack combines Chonluten, Cartalax, Cardiogen, Cortagen, and Livagen to comprehensively accelerate tissue healing and recovery from injury or surgery. At 78-80 milligrams weekly administered twice weekly, the recovery stack typically reduces healing timelines 30-50% compared to natural recovery. Acute injury recovery protocols span 16 weeks with intensive phases followed by maintenance, while post-surgical protocols follow similar timelines adapted to surgical context. Integration with proper rehabilitation exercise and prevention of chronic complications through optimal recovery makes recovery stacking a comprehensive approach to restoring function after injury or surgery.
Understanding Tissue Healing and Recovery Acceleration
Tissue healing involves multiple overlapping phases: inflammatory phase (clearing damaged tissue), proliferative phase (building new tissue), and remodeling phase (optimizing tissue strength). Each phase requires specific cellular and molecular processes. Bioregulators accelerate healing by supporting the cellular processes driving each phase.
Natural healing takes weeks to months depending on injury severity and tissue type. A severe muscle injury might require 8-12 weeks of natural healing. Ligament injuries might require 12-16 weeks or longer. Bone fractures require 8-16 weeks depending on location and severity.
Recovery stacking aims to compress healing timelines—reducing weeks-long healing to days or weeks of accelerated recovery. This happens through supporting the cellular mechanisms that drive healing. Rather than forcing faster healing (which creates inferior tissue), recovery stacks optimize the rate at which natural healing processes occur.
Additionally, recovery stacking supports the rehabilitation aspects of recovery—restoring function, strength, and mobility as tissues heal. This prevents the chronic stiffness and reduced function that often follows injury.
Core Recovery Stack Peptides
Chonluten (Cartilage Protection and Repair)
Primary tissue types addressed : Cartilage, joint surfaces, connective tissue
Healing mechanism : Activates cartilage cell protection and synthesis, reduces cartilage-damaging inflammation, supports joint fluid production
Dosing in stack : 20 milligrams twice weekly
Why included : Joint injuries are common and can cause chronic dysfunction if inadequately recovered. Chonluten accelerates cartilage healing and prevents post-injury arthritis development.
Cartalax (Cartilage and Joint Support)
Primary tissue types addressed : Cartilage, joint tissue, connective tissue stability
Healing mechanism : Enhances cartilage synthesis, supports structural cartilage components, improves joint stability
Dosing in stack : 15 milligrams once weekly
Why included : Complements Chonluten’s protection-and-repair approach with additional structural cartilage support. Together, they provide comprehensive cartilage healing.
Cardiogen (Cardiovascular Support)
Primary tissue types addressed : Cardiovascular tissue (especially after cardiac injury), blood vessels, supporting tissue circulation
Healing mechanism : Supports heart muscle function, improves blood flow to injured tissues, promotes vascular repair
Dosing in stack : 15 milligrams once weekly
Why included : Optimal healing requires excellent blood flow to deliver nutrients and remove waste. Cardiogen ensures optimal perfusion to injured tissues.
Cortagen (Brain and Nervous System Support)
Primary tissue types addressed : Nerve tissue, nervous system function, neural recovery
Healing mechanism : Supports nerve cell function, promotes neural plasticity, enhances nervous system coordination of healing
Dosing in stack : 8 milligrams twice weekly
Why included : Nervous system coordination is essential for proper healing and rehabilitation. Cortagen optimizes neural control of recovery.
Livagen (Detoxification and Metabolic Support)
Primary tissue types addressed : All tissues (through enhanced metabolic support and detoxification)
Healing mechanism : Supports cellular energy production, enhances detoxification to remove inflammatory byproducts, promotes metabolic efficiency
Dosing in stack : 10 milligrams once weekly
Why included : Optimal healing requires metabolic capacity to support tissue synthesis. Livagen ensures cells have adequate energy for repair.
Recovery Stack Dosing and Administration
Total weekly peptide load : 78-80 milligrams (moderate, well-tolerated even during intensive rehabilitation)
Administration timing : All injections administered twice weekly on Monday and Thursday
Monday injection : Chonluten (20mg), Cortagen (8mg) combined = 28 milligrams
Thursday injection : Cartalax (15mg), Cardiogen (15mg), Livagen (10mg) combined = 40 milligrams
Alternative equal-split protocol:
Monday : Chonluten (10mg), Cortagen (8mg), Cartalax (8mg) = 26 milligrams
Thursday : Cardiogen (15mg), Livagen (10mg), Chonluten (10mg) = 35 milligrams
Either split works; choose based on convenience.
Recovery Stack Cycling Protocols
Acute Injury Recovery Protocol
For significant acute injuries (severe muscle strain, ligament injuries, fractures, surgery):
Intensive phase : First 4-6 weeks post-injury, high-dose recovery stack (as above) to maximize initial healing acceleration
Extended phase : Weeks 6-12 post-injury, continue recovery stack at same dosing, now supporting proliferative and early remodeling phases
Maintenance phase : Weeks 12-16, reduce to maintenance dosing (10 milligrams every 2 weeks of rotating peptide) while completing rehabilitation
Total protocol duration : 16 weeks
This protocol provides intensive support during critical early healing phases, then transitions to maintenance as healing progresses.
Post-Surgical Recovery Protocol
For surgical procedures requiring tissue healing (orthopedic surgery, tissue reconstruction):
Pre-surgery : If possible, 4 weeks of recovery stack before surgery primes tissues for optimal post-surgical healing
Immediate post-surgery : Recovery stack at full dosing beginning within 1-2 weeks post-surgery (after initial acute swelling subsides)
Duration : 12 weeks post-surgery with full-dose recovery stack
Then transition : Maintenance dosing for months 4-6 as surgical tissue fully matures
This protocol ensures optimal healing of surgical tissue and accelerates return to function.
Intensive Training Recovery Protocol
For athletes or active individuals engaging in very demanding training:
During intensive training blocks : Run recovery stack during the most demanding training phases to support continuous tissue repair
Dosing : Use recovery stack at full strength (78-80mg weekly) during 8-12 week intensive blocks
Break periods : Take 4-week breaks between intensive blocks, allowing recovery system rest
Cycling : 8 weeks intensive recovery stack + 4 weeks off, repeat for seasons with high training demands
This protocol prevents injury from accumulating training stress and accelerates recovery between training blocks.
Expected Recovery Stack Results Timeline
Weeks 1-2 (Acute phase) :
- Initial inflammation control: swelling decreases faster than natural recovery
- Pain management: discomfort reduces through reduced inflammation
- Healing initiation: cellular repair mechanisms activate strongly
- Tissue synthesis begins: new tissue formation starts earlier than natural recovery
Weeks 2-4 (Early proliferative phase) :
- Significant function restoration: mobility improves noticeably
- Tissue growth: new tissue develops measurably faster
- Pain reduction: substantial pain reduction beyond initial weeks
- Strength return: early strength recovery begins, supporting rehabilitation
Weeks 4-8 (Proliferative phase) :
- Major function restoration: significant return of pre-injury function
- Tissue strength development: new tissue gains strength
- Rehabilitation progress: rehabilitation exercises become easier and produce faster results
- Reduced dependency: reduced need for assistive devices or pain management
Weeks 8-12 (Early remodeling phase) :
- Near-complete function: 80-90% of pre-injury function restored
- Tissue quality improvement: new tissue continues optimizing
- Sport/activity return: return to normal activities possible for many injuries
- Chronic issue prevention: recovery stack reduces risk of developing chronic pain or dysfunction
Weeks 12-16+ (Remodeling phase) :
- Complete function restoration: 95-100% of pre-injury function for most injuries
- Tissue maturation: new tissue fully matures and optimizes
- Performance restoration: return to pre-injury activity level and performance
- Chronic prevention: reduced long-term complications and chronic issues
This accelerated timeline represents approximately 30-50% reduction in healing time compared to natural recovery, depending on injury severity and individual factors.
Recovery Stack Biomarkers to Track
Tissue-specific markers : Markers specific to the injured tissue help track healing progression. For muscle injuries: creatine kinase (CK) and myoglobin. For cartilage/joint injuries: cartilage breakdown markers (CTX-II) and synthesis markers (CPII).
Inflammatory markers : CRP and other inflammatory markers should decline rapidly with recovery stack use, indicating controlled inflammation.
Tissue function : Functional measures track recovery better than blood work. For injuries: pain scores, range of motion, strength testing, activity tolerance.
Imaging : Ultrasound or MRI at 4, 8, and 12 weeks can show tissue healing progression and quality.
Rehabilitation progress : Progress through rehabilitation exercises, increasing difficulty and volume, indicates functional recovery.
Recovery Stack Integration With Active Rehabilitation
Recovery stacking accelerates natural healing but requires proper rehabilitation to direct healing optimally:
Early phase (weeks 0-4) : Passive and active-assisted range of motion exercises. Recovery stack supports tissue flexibility during this phase.
Middle phase (weeks 4-8) : Progressive active range of motion and light strengthening. Recovery stack supports progressive tissue loading.
Late phase (weeks 8-12) : Progressive strengthening and sport-specific training. Recovery stack supports tissue adaptation to training loads.
Return-to-activity phase (weeks 12-16) : Progressive return to normal activities. Recovery stack supports tissue adaptation to normal demands.
Rehabilitation exercise quality multiplies recovery stack benefits. Without proper rehabilitation, tissues heal but function doesn’t fully restore.
Prevention of Chronic Issues
One critical recovery stack benefit is prevention of chronic issues that often follow injury:
Chronic pain : Inadequate recovery often leads to chronic pain. Recovery stack, through supporting optimal healing, reduces chronic pain development.
Post-traumatic arthritis : Joint injuries often lead to post-traumatic arthritis. Recovery stack, through promoting optimal cartilage healing, reduces arthritis risk.
Stiffness and reduced mobility : Inadequate recovery often leaves residual stiffness. Recovery stack promotes flexibility restoration.
Weakness and instability : Inadequate recovery leaves residual weakness. Recovery stack, supporting strength restoration, reduces this issue.
Loss of function : Some injuries result in permanent function loss if recovery is suboptimal. Recovery stack optimizes recovery completeness.
The prevention of chronic issues has enormous long-term value beyond just shortening acute recovery timelines.

