PodcastsRank #13960
Artwork for PainExam Podcast

PainExam Podcast

MedicinePodcastsHealth & FitnessEducationCoursesENunited-statesDaily or near-daily
4 / 527 ratings
David Rosenblum, MD, creator of PainExam.com and Director of Pain Management at New York Based, AABP Pain Management discusses Pain Board Review and issues relevant to pain physicians. Marketing, practice management and Board Prep are discussed. For more information and CME Credit's go to PainExam.com Also, be sure to check out Dr. Rosenblum's children's book: Welwyn Ardsley and the Cosmic Ninjas: Preparing your child and yourself for anesthesia and surgery. Available at Amazon.com and www.MyKidsSurgery.com
Top 27.9% by pitch volume (Rank #13960 of 50,000)Data updated Feb 10, 2026

Key Facts

Publishes
Daily or near-daily
Episodes
338
Founded
N/A
Category
Medicine
Number of listeners
Private
Hidden on public pages

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Public snapshot
Audience: Under 4K / month
Canonical: https://podpitch.com/podcasts/painexam-podcast
Cadence: Active monthly
Reply rate: Under 2%

Latest Episodes

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Peptides and BPC-157 for Pain: What's the deal?

Wed Jan 28 2026

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Peptides in Pain Management: BPC-157, Risks, Reality, and the Business of Regenerative Medicine Episode Length: ~12–15 minutes Target Audience: Pain physicians, anesthesiologists, PM&R, sports medicine, and regenerative medicine clinicians Hosted by: Dr. David Rosenblum, MD Produced by: PainExam | NRAP Academy 🧠 Episode Overview Peptides like BPC-157 have exploded in popularity across regenerative medicine, sports medicine, and cash-based pain practices — but does the science support the hype? In this episode of PainExam, Dr. David Rosenblum takes a critical, evidence-based look at BPC-157 and other peptidesin pain management, examining: The biological rationale behind peptide therapy Preclinical and early human evidence for pain and tissue healing Regulatory status and safety concerns Ethical, legal, and marketing risks for physicians How peptides are currently being incorporated — and monetized — in pain practices This episode is designed to help clinicians separate science from marketing, and to approach peptide therapies with appropriate caution and professionalism. ⏱️ Episode Breakdown 🔹 00:00–01:30 — Introduction Why peptides are trending in pain and regenerative medicine What patients are asking — and what physicians need to know 🔹 01:30–04:30 — What Is BPC-157? Origins of Body Protection Compound-157 Mechanisms: angiogenesis, inflammation modulation, tissue repair Summary of preclinical data and animal pain models 🔹 04:30–07:00 — Evidence for Pain Relief & Healing Early inflammatory and non-inflammatory pain studies Intra-articular BPC-157 for knee pain: what the case series showed Why current human data are hypothesis-generating, not definitive 🔹 07:00–09:30 — Risks, Unknowns & Regulatory Issues FDA status and investigational use Quality, purity, and dosing variability Theoretical biologic risks and drug interactions 🔹 09:30–12:30 — The Business of Peptides in Pain Practice How peptides are marketed in regenerative clinics Cash-based models and patient demand Ethical marketing, informed consent, and medicolegal exposure 🔹 12:30–End — Clinical Takeaways Where peptides fit — and don't fit — in current pain practice Why evidence still matters in regenerative medicine ⚠️ Key Clinical Takeaways BPC-157 shows promising preclinical data, but human evidence remains limited Current studies lack randomization, controls, and long-term outcomes Peptides are not FDA-approved for pain or musculoskeletal indications Marketing peptides without transparency poses ethical and legal risk Physicians must clearly distinguish experimental therapies from standard of care 📚 Key References Discussed Józwiak et al. Multifunctionality and Possible Medical Application of BPC-157 — MDPI Pharmaceuticals (2025) McGuire et al. Regeneration or Risk? A Narrative Review of BPC-157 — Current Reviews in Musculoskeletal Medicine (2025) Sikirić et al. Effects of BPC-157 on Inflammatory and Non-Inflammatory Pain — Inflammopharmacology (1993) Lee & Padgett. Intra-Articular Injection of BPC-157 for Knee Pain — Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine (2021) 📢 Sponsored Message / Advertisement 🔔 Ready to Master Evidence-Based Pain Medicine? If you're preparing for Pain Medicine boards or looking to strengthen your foundation in interventional and regenerative pain management, check out the educational resources at: 👉 https://www.nrappain.org 🎓 Offered through NRAP Academy: ✅ PainExam® Pain Management Board Review ✅ ABA, ABPM, FIPP, and ABIPP exam preparation ✅ Ultrasound-guided pain procedure training ✅ Regenerative pain medicine education — grounded in evidence, not hype ✅ Virtual Pain Fellowship curriculum All content is designed by practicing pain physicians, for practicing pain physicians. 🎯 Why Learn with NRAP Academy? Evidence-driven, board-relevant education Practical clinical insights you can apply immediately Trusted by physicians nationwide Focused on ethical, safe, and effective pain care 👉 Explore courses and upcoming programs at https://www.nrappain.org 🎧 Subscribe & Stay Sharp If you found this episode helpful: Subscribe to the PainExam Podcast Share it with a colleague Leave a review to help other pain physicians find evidence-based content Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. Discussion of investigational therapies does not constitute endorsement or clinical recommendation. Physicians should follow applicable laws, regulations, and professional guidelines when considering experimental treatments.   References Lee, Edwin, and Blake Padgett. "Intra-Articular Injection of BPC 157 for Multiple Types of Knee Pain." Alternative Therapies in Health & Medicine 27.4 (2021). Józwiak, Michalina, et al. "Multifunctionality and Possible Medical Application of the BPC 157 Peptide—Literature and Patent Review." Pharmaceuticals 18.2 (2025): 185. McGuire, F. P., Martinez, R., Lenz, A., Skinner, L., & Cushman, D. M. (2025). Regeneration or risk? A narrative review of BPC-157 for musculoskeletal healing. Current Reviews in Musculoskeletal Medicine, 18(12), 611-619.

More

Peptides in Pain Management: BPC-157, Risks, Reality, and the Business of Regenerative Medicine Episode Length: ~12–15 minutes Target Audience: Pain physicians, anesthesiologists, PM&R, sports medicine, and regenerative medicine clinicians Hosted by: Dr. David Rosenblum, MD Produced by: PainExam | NRAP Academy 🧠 Episode Overview Peptides like BPC-157 have exploded in popularity across regenerative medicine, sports medicine, and cash-based pain practices — but does the science support the hype? In this episode of PainExam, Dr. David Rosenblum takes a critical, evidence-based look at BPC-157 and other peptidesin pain management, examining: The biological rationale behind peptide therapy Preclinical and early human evidence for pain and tissue healing Regulatory status and safety concerns Ethical, legal, and marketing risks for physicians How peptides are currently being incorporated — and monetized — in pain practices This episode is designed to help clinicians separate science from marketing, and to approach peptide therapies with appropriate caution and professionalism. ⏱️ Episode Breakdown 🔹 00:00–01:30 — Introduction Why peptides are trending in pain and regenerative medicine What patients are asking — and what physicians need to know 🔹 01:30–04:30 — What Is BPC-157? Origins of Body Protection Compound-157 Mechanisms: angiogenesis, inflammation modulation, tissue repair Summary of preclinical data and animal pain models 🔹 04:30–07:00 — Evidence for Pain Relief & Healing Early inflammatory and non-inflammatory pain studies Intra-articular BPC-157 for knee pain: what the case series showed Why current human data are hypothesis-generating, not definitive 🔹 07:00–09:30 — Risks, Unknowns & Regulatory Issues FDA status and investigational use Quality, purity, and dosing variability Theoretical biologic risks and drug interactions 🔹 09:30–12:30 — The Business of Peptides in Pain Practice How peptides are marketed in regenerative clinics Cash-based models and patient demand Ethical marketing, informed consent, and medicolegal exposure 🔹 12:30–End — Clinical Takeaways Where peptides fit — and don't fit — in current pain practice Why evidence still matters in regenerative medicine ⚠️ Key Clinical Takeaways BPC-157 shows promising preclinical data, but human evidence remains limited Current studies lack randomization, controls, and long-term outcomes Peptides are not FDA-approved for pain or musculoskeletal indications Marketing peptides without transparency poses ethical and legal risk Physicians must clearly distinguish experimental therapies from standard of care 📚 Key References Discussed Józwiak et al. Multifunctionality and Possible Medical Application of BPC-157 — MDPI Pharmaceuticals (2025) McGuire et al. Regeneration or Risk? A Narrative Review of BPC-157 — Current Reviews in Musculoskeletal Medicine (2025) Sikirić et al. Effects of BPC-157 on Inflammatory and Non-Inflammatory Pain — Inflammopharmacology (1993) Lee & Padgett. Intra-Articular Injection of BPC-157 for Knee Pain — Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine (2021) 📢 Sponsored Message / Advertisement 🔔 Ready to Master Evidence-Based Pain Medicine? If you're preparing for Pain Medicine boards or looking to strengthen your foundation in interventional and regenerative pain management, check out the educational resources at: 👉 https://www.nrappain.org 🎓 Offered through NRAP Academy: ✅ PainExam® Pain Management Board Review ✅ ABA, ABPM, FIPP, and ABIPP exam preparation ✅ Ultrasound-guided pain procedure training ✅ Regenerative pain medicine education — grounded in evidence, not hype ✅ Virtual Pain Fellowship curriculum All content is designed by practicing pain physicians, for practicing pain physicians. 🎯 Why Learn with NRAP Academy? Evidence-driven, board-relevant education Practical clinical insights you can apply immediately Trusted by physicians nationwide Focused on ethical, safe, and effective pain care 👉 Explore courses and upcoming programs at https://www.nrappain.org 🎧 Subscribe & Stay Sharp If you found this episode helpful: Subscribe to the PainExam Podcast Share it with a colleague Leave a review to help other pain physicians find evidence-based content Disclaimer: This podcast is for educational purposes only. Discussion of investigational therapies does not constitute endorsement or clinical recommendation. Physicians should follow applicable laws, regulations, and professional guidelines when considering experimental treatments.   References Lee, Edwin, and Blake Padgett. "Intra-Articular Injection of BPC 157 for Multiple Types of Knee Pain." Alternative Therapies in Health & Medicine 27.4 (2021). Józwiak, Michalina, et al. "Multifunctionality and Possible Medical Application of the BPC 157 Peptide—Literature and Patent Review." Pharmaceuticals 18.2 (2025): 185. McGuire, F. P., Martinez, R., Lenz, A., Skinner, L., & Cushman, D. M. (2025). Regeneration or risk? A narrative review of BPC-157 for musculoskeletal healing. Current Reviews in Musculoskeletal Medicine, 18(12), 611-619.

Key Metrics

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Pitches sent
24
From PodPitch users
Rank
#13960
Top 27.9% by pitch volume (Rank #13960 of 50,000)
Average rating
4.0
From 27 ratings
Reviews
1
Written reviews (when available)
Publish cadence
Daily or near-daily
Active monthly
Episode count
338
Data updated
Feb 10, 2026
Social followers
4.7K

Public Snapshot

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Country
United States
Language
English
Language (ISO)
Release cadence
Daily or near-daily
Latest episode date
Wed Jan 28 2026

Audience & Outreach (Public)

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Audience range
Under 4K / month
Public band
Reply rate band
Under 2%
Public band
Response time band
30+ days
Public band
Replies received
6–20
Public band

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Presence & Signals

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Social followers
4.7K
Contact available
Yes
Masked on public pages
Sponsors detected
Private
Hidden on public pages
Guest format
Private
Hidden on public pages

Social links

No public profiles listed.

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Monthly listeners49,360
Reply rate18.2%
Avg response4.1 days
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4 / 527 ratings
Ratings27
Written reviews1

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Frequently Asked Questions About PainExam Podcast

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What is PainExam Podcast about?

David Rosenblum, MD, creator of PainExam.com and Director of Pain Management at New York Based, AABP Pain Management discusses Pain Board Review and issues relevant to pain physicians. Marketing, practice management and Board Prep are discussed. For more information and CME Credit's go to PainExam.com Also, be sure to check out Dr. Rosenblum's children's book: Welwyn Ardsley and the Cosmic Ninjas: Preparing your child and yourself for anesthesia and surgery. Available at Amazon.com and www.MyKidsSurgery.com

How often does PainExam Podcast publish new episodes?

Daily or near-daily

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