Masthead
About Kisspeptin Store.
A field-notebook digest of the published kisspeptin literature, read straight from the sources.
What this site is
Kisspeptin Store is an independent editorial project that publishes plain-English summaries of the peer-reviewed research literature on kisspeptin. We are not a clinic. We do not employ clinicians and we do not provide medical advice. We do not manufacture, sell, or distribute any product. Our work is editorial commentary on publicly available science.
We read the published studies — the puberty genetics, the GnRH-neuron mechanism, the human LH and testosterone trials, the IVF and amenorrhea work, and the sexual-brain research — and we write down, carefully and with citations, what they actually measured. We treat kisspeptin the way a field notebook treats a watched phenomenon: observe closely, record precisely, mark where the data stop.
About the name
The word "store" in this site's name is editorial framing, not a description of any service. We do not sell kisspeptin or anything else, and we are not a vendor. A reader will find no products, no prices, no order forms, and no sourcing here, by design — terms like "buy," "for sale," and "vendor" are deliberately outside our scope. The name marks a position relative to the literature: a place where the kisspeptin record is kept and organized for reading, the way a store of knowledge is kept. Any commercial reading of the word is mistaken.
How we handle the science
Three rules govern every page. First, every quantitative claim is cited to a real, named study — no number appears without a source. Second, we describe doses only as they were studied: what was given, to which population, by which route, never as a recommendation, because kisspeptin is investigational and approved by no regulator. Third, we keep the cited findings strictly apart from what people anecdotally report; the latter lives only on the effects page under a clear "anecdotal, not clinical evidence" label. The sexual-brain angle, which this site follows, is covered frankly and usefully — but the subjective reports are never dressed up as trial data, and no human dosing or medical advice appears anywhere.