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DSIP

Emideltide, DSIP nonapeptide, Delta sleep-inducing peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 458
Trials 82
Score 3
1989 pubmed 17 citations

Reduction of immunoreactive ACTH in plasma following intravenous injection of delta sleep-inducing peptide in man.

Bjartell. A A; Ekman. R R; Bergquist. S S; Widerlöv. E E

Key Findings

  • IV DSIP (25 nmol/kg) caused a significant drop in plasma ACTH‑like immunoreactivity for at least 3 hours.
  • Plasma cortisol followed its normal daily decline and was not affected by DSIP.
  • Urinary cortisol and monoamine metabolite levels showed no differences between DSIP and placebo.

Practical Outcomes

  • DSIP may be useful for short‑term modulation of the ACTH part of the stress axis, but it doesn't appear to change overall cortisol output. For biohackers, this suggests a potential tool for influencing stress signaling, though more research is needed before it can be recommended as a reliable protocol.

Summary

A single IV dose of the synthetic peptide DSIP lowered the blood levels of ACTH, a hormone that tells the adrenal glands to release stress hormones, for at least three hours. It didn't change cortisol (the main stress hormone) in the blood or urine, and other stress‑related metabolites stayed the same. This shows DSIP can temporarily suppress ACTH secretion in healthy men.

Abstract

Eleven healthy male volunteers, ages 25-39 years, received a single dose of synthetic delta sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP) (25 nmol/kg BW) or saline intravenously in a randomized cross-over, double-blind study. The concentrations of neuropeptides related to the hypothalamic pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and cortisol were examined in serial plasma samples. In addition, cortisol and monoamine metabolites were determined in urine. A significant reduction of ACTH-like immunoreactivity (ACTH-LI) in plasma was detected for at least 3 hr after the DSIP injection, compared to the control subjects, in whom a slightly elevated concentration of ACTH-LI occurred. Plasma cortisol levels were unaffected and followed the normal diurnal decline. No differences in urinary cortisol or monoamine metabolite concentrations occurred between the two groups. The results indicate an inhibitory action of DSIP on ACTH secretion in man, as previously suggested by animal experiments.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1989

Date

1989-12-31T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/0306-4530(89)90004-8

Citations

17

References

30