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ARA 290

Cibinetide, PHBSP, PH-BSP, Helix B surface peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 51
Trials 5
2018 pubmed 2 citations

Corneal nerve fiber size adds utility to the diagnosis and assessment of therapeutic response in patients with small fiber neuropathy.

Brines. Michael M; Culver. Daniel A DA; Ferdousi. Maryam M; Tannemaat. Martijn R MR; van Velzen. Monique M; Dahan. Albert A; Malik. Rayaz A RA

Key Findings

  • Corneal nerve fiber width and area change with how severe the neuropathy is.
  • Nerve fiber area works as well as density, branch density, and length for diagnosing nerve damage.
  • Nerve fiber area and length follow a predictable quadratic relationship in both healthy people and those with neuropathy.
  • Tracking nerve fiber area can show how the nerves are repairing over time.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research mainly offers a new diagnostic tool for doctors, not a direct protocol or dosage advice. It doesn’t provide actionable steps for self‑experimenting with ara‑290 or other interventions.

Summary

This study shows that measuring the size of nerve fibers in the eye can help doctors detect and track small‑fiber nerve damage, but it doesn’t give any tips on using the peptide ara‑290 or any other DIY health hacks.

Abstract

Small fiber neuropathy (SFN) is a common feature of many inflammatory diseases, often presenting with pain and disability. SFN is diagnosed using symptoms, thermal threshold testing, and intra-epidermal nerve fiber quantification. Corneal confocal microscopy (CCM) is an ophthalmic imaging technique which non-invasively quantifies corneal nerve fiber (CNF) density, branch density and length, and has comparable diagnostic and superior ability to identify nerve regeneration compared to skin biopsy. CNF size (width and area) depends upon the number of fibers within each nerve, as well as pathology (e.g., swelling), and may provide additional sensitivity to diagnose SFN and identify nerve repair. We have compared the utility of the standard CCM variables employed to CNF size in patients with diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy or sarcoidosis-associated SFN, and in patients with SFN following cibinetide administration, an agent which promotes nerve repair. The results show that: 1) CNF width distribution and area depend upon neuropathy severity; 2) CNF area, density, branch density and length possess comparable discriminatory power for diagnosing neuropathy; 3) CNF area is related to length by a quadratic function which is predictive for both healthy subjects and those with SFN; 4) CNF area is a useful variable for quantifying change in CNF morphology.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-03-16T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1038/s41598-018-23107-w

Citations

2