[Optimization of cardiovascular function by peptide bio-regulators].
Cherkashin. V A VA; Semin. G F GF; Veretenko. A A AA
Key Findings
- Thymalin, epithalamine, and cortexine were tested in patients with cardiovascular and cerebrovascular issues.
- Patients showed marked improvements in hemodynamic (blood flow) parameters after treatment.
- The assessment was based on principles of automatic regulation theory, indicating better functional stability of the cardiovascular system.
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests these peptides might help improve blood flow and cardiovascular regulation, but without dosage or safety details it’s not ready for direct use. Biohackers should treat this as a preliminary signal and wait for more rigorous, protocol‑specific research before experimenting.
Summary
A study looked at three peptide bioregulators—including thymalin—on people with heart and brain blood vessel problems and found that they improved blood flow measurements. However, the report does not give details on how much peptide was used, how often, or who exactly benefited, so it’s hard to turn this into a clear DIY protocol.
Abstract
Effects of peptide bioregulators (thymaline, epithalamine, cortexine) on systemic hemodynamics in cardiovascular and cerebrovascular affections were studied. Assessment of functional stability and quality of cardiovascular system regulation was made according to methodological principles of automatic regulation theory. Peptide bioregulators showed high effectiveness in the above patients who markedly improved their hemodynamic parameters.
Study Information
pubmed
2002