About Melanotan 2 Source: An Independent Research Digest
What this is
Melanotan 2 Source is an independent editorial project. It publishes plain-English summaries of the peer-reviewed research literature on Melanotan 2 (Melanotan II, MT-2). That is the whole job: read the studies, report what they measured, cite the source.
The "source" in the name is editorial framing — a research-due-diligence position relative to the literature. It is not a claim to be a supplier. This site does not sell, manufacture, distribute, or broker Melanotan 2 or any other product, and it carries no store, no prices, and no buy links.
What this is not
We are not a clinic. We do not employ clinicians, and we do not provide medical advice. We do not diagnose, treat, or recommend a course of action. We do not provide consultations, prescriptions, or dosing protocols.
We do not sell, supply, or recommend a vendor for any product. Where the site lists doses, those are study-design facts — what researchers gave to which species, by which route — never recommendations. Melanotan 2 is not approved for human use by any regulator [4], and nothing here should be read as encouraging its use.
How we work
The editorial approach is narrow and consistent. We lead with what was measured. We attribute every quantitative claim to a numbered citation that resolves to PubMed. We separate controlled findings from case reports, and we separate both from anecdotal community reports — which are labeled as such and never presented as proof.
This site leads with the neuro-behavioral angle: what the brain studies show about appetite, sexual motivation, mood, and social behavior. That is an editorial lens on a broad literature, not the only thing the compound does. The full bibliography is on the Melanotan 2 references page, and reported and theoretical concerns are on the Melanotan 2 effects page.
Corrections
If a citation is wrong, a study is misread, or a finding is overstated, that is a defect and we want to fix it. Corrections can be sent through the contact page. The standard is simple: the page should say only what the cited studies support, no more.