Different effects of delta-sleep-inducing peptide on arginine-vasopressin and ACTH secretion in normal men.
Chiodera. P P; Volpi. R R; Capretti. L L; Giacalone. G G; Caffarri. G G; Davoli. C C; Nigro. E E; Coiro. V V
Key Findings
- DSIP (25 nmol/kg) caused a significant drop in circulating ACTH levels compared with saline alone.
- DSIP did not alter baseline AVP levels.
- When participants were given hypertonic saline (to trigger AVP release) or stood upright (orthostatic test), AVP rose as expected and DSIP did not change that response.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in stress‑hormone modulation, DSIP may be useful for temporarily reducing ACTH, but it offers no benefit for controlling water balance or vasopressin‑related functions. The study used an IV infusion in a small group, so there’s no clear guidance on oral dosing or long‑term use.
Summary
A short infusion of the peptide delta‑sleep‑inducing peptide (DSIP) in healthy young men lowered the stress‑related hormone ACTH, but it didn’t change the water‑balance hormone AVP, even when the body was challenged with salty water or standing up. In other words, DSIP can blunt ACTH spikes but doesn’t seem to affect the body’s normal AVP response.
Abstract
Delta-sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP) is a well-known inhibitor of pituitary ACTH secretion. In order to evaluate the possible influence of DSIP on basal arginine-vasopressin (AVP) secretion and/or on the AVP-response to osmotic and pressure/volumetric stimuli, DSIP (25 nmol/kg) was infused in 10 min to 8 normal men (23-34 years old) just before a 2-hour infusion of normal saline (NaCl 0.9%; DSIP test) or hypertonic saline (0.51 M NaCl; osmotic test) or before an orthostatic test (standing upright and maintaining an orthostatic position for 20 min). In different occasions, a 10-min infusion of normal saline (placebo) was given instead of DSIP. In an additional 7 subjects, DSIP or placebo was given 60 min before hypertonic saline or the orthostatic test. The results obtained after the administration of DSIP at time 0 and at -60 min were similar. The administration of DSIP or normal saline alone did not change the concentrations of circulating AVP. A slight physiological decline in ACTH levels was observed during saline infusion, whereas a significant decrease in ACTH levels was induced by DSIP administration. Osmotic stimulation of AVP secretion by hypertonic NaCl induced a significant increase in plasma AVP concentrations which was not modified by DSIP administration. The ACTH secretory patterns during hypertonic NaCl and hypertonic NaCl plus DSIP were similar to those observed during normal saline and normal saline plus DSIP, respectively. The orthostatic test provided similar plasma AVP increments, regardless of the previous treatment with DSIP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Study Information
pubmed
1994
10.1159/000184207
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