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DSIP

Emideltide, DSIP nonapeptide, Delta sleep-inducing peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 458
Trials 82
Score 1
1992 pubmed

Plasma levels of DSIP in infants in the first year of life and SIDS risk.

Scholle. S S; Zwacka. G G; Ekman. R R; Glaser. S S

Key Findings

  • DSIP plasma levels do not change with age during the first year of life.
  • Full‑term healthy infants have higher DSIP levels than preterm infants or those with long apnea episodes.
  • DSIP levels in healthy infants are similar to those in siblings of SIDS victims, indicating no clear link to SIDS risk.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this research offers little direct guidance. It suggests DSIP is related to normal sleep development in infants but does not provide actionable dosing or performance benefits for adults. No protocol changes or supplementation advice can be derived from these findings.

Summary

The study measured a sleep‑related peptide called DSIP in babies and found that its blood level stays the same throughout the first year, is a bit higher in healthy full‑term infants compared to preterm or apnea‑prone babies, and shows no special difference in kids who have siblings that died of SIDS.

Abstract

In searching for abnormalities related to the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), delta sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP), a regulatory peptide with sleep promoting actions, was investigated in the first year of life in four groups of children: (1) preterm infants (n = 28), (2) infants with a high mean apnea duration evaluated polysomnographically (n = 26), (3) healthy full-term infants (n = 37) and (4) siblings of SIDS-victims (n = 26). DSIP was radioimmunoassayed in plasma. Half of the infants were also investigated polygraphically during sleep. The ratio between quiet sleep and active sleep was determined. There was no age dependence of the plasma level of DSIP in the first year of life but there was an increase in the ratio of quiet/active sleep depending of maturity. The level of DSIP in healthy full-term infants was significantly higher (P less than 0.05) (median: 1885 pmol/l, interquartile range: 757 pmol/l) than in preterms (1595; 385) and in infants with a high mean apnea duration (1542; 373). There was no significant difference in DSIP concentrations between healthy full-term infants and SIDS-siblings (1605; 271).

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1992

Date

1992-04-29T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/0167-0115(92)90005-f