[Experimental hemorrhagic stroke: the study of neuropeptides (MIF, selank) in the intraperitoneal injection].
Skvortsova. V I VI; Tvorogova. T V TV; Dubina. A I AI; Burenchev. D V DV; Gubskiĭ. L V LV; Stakhovskaia. L V LV; Povarova. O V OV
Key Findings
- Selank was administered intraperitoneally at 300 µg/kg daily after experimental intracerebral hemorrhage in rats
- No early reduction in bleed size or surrounding swelling, but both were smaller by day 10 in all groups
- Only the selank‑treated rats showed significant improvement in neurological tests on day 10
Practical Outcomes
- The result hints that selank might aid brain recovery after serious injury, but it offers no clear benefit for healthy people seeking longevity or performance gains. There’s no actionable dosing protocol for everyday use, and more human research would be needed before considering it for neuro‑protective purposes.
Summary
In a rat study, giving the peptide selank (300 µg per kg body weight) by injection after a brain bleed didn’t change the size of the bleed right away, but the animals showed better neurological scores by day 10 compared with untreated rats, and they didn’t lose weight like the control group.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine Taftsin derivates--macrophage inhibitory factor (MIF, Thr-Lys-Pro) and heptapeptide selank (Thr-Lys-Pro-Arg-Pro-Gly-Pro) in the model of experimental intracerebral hemorrhage in rats. The double autologous blood injection in the basal nucleus was used as a model of intracerebral hemorrhage. Animals ware randomly divided into three groups--the control group (n = 5) was treated with saline, the second group (n = 5) was injected with MIF in dose 150 mkg/ kg/day, the third group (n = 5) received Selank in dose 300 mkg/kg/day. Intraperitoneal injection of peptides was used. Body weight assessment, neurological examination and brain MRI were performed in 24, 72 hours and 10 days after the hematoma formation. The effect of neuropeptides on the functional restoration in animals, in the absence of the effect on hematoma volume and perifocal edema, was found. The significant reduction of perifocal edema and hematoma volume was observed in the 10th day after the hematoma formation in all experimental groups (p < 0.05). Only the control group of animals showed the significant (p < 0.05) weight loss in the 3rd day after the operation. The rate of neurological deficit was different: the significant improvement assessed with Menzes and limb placing test scales was seen only in the groups treated with neuropeptides in the 10th day.
Study Information
pubmed
2009