[Blood albumin in mechanisms of individual resistance of rats to emotional stress].
Koplik. E V EV; Grysunov. Iu A IuA; Dobretsov. G E GE
Key Findings
- Rats with different natural resistance to stress show distinct serum albumin patterns.
- Administering DSIP (and SEMAX) alters albumin characteristics in stressed rats.
- The peptide‑induced changes in albumin depend on the animal’s baseline stress resilience.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the work suggests DSIP might influence stress‑related blood markers, but it provides no dosage guidance, safety data, or human relevance. Until human studies confirm these effects, the findings are mainly of scientific interest rather than a usable protocol.
Summary
Researchers measured a blood protein called albumin in rats that were either good or poor at handling emotional stress. They also gave some rats two peptides—DSIP and SEMAX—to see if these could boost stress resistance and how they changed albumin levels. The study is basic and done in animals, so it doesn’t give clear instructions for people to use these peptides.
Abstract
Serum albumin parametres in the rats with various prognostic resistance against emotional stress in the control and in conditions of experimental emotional stress were investigated. Analysis of action of peptides raising the animals' resistance against emotional stress (DSIP and SEMAX) in rats with different prognostic resistance against emotional stress, on the serum albumin characteristics, was carried out.
Study Information
pubmed
2002