Synthetic and natural immunomodulators acting as interferon inducers.
Silin. Dmytro S DS; Lyubomska. Oksana V OV; Ershov. Feliks I FI; Frolov. Valeriy M VM; Kutsyna. Galyna A GA
Key Findings
- Thymogen is among a group of interferon‑inducing agents used historically in former socialist nations
- Interferon inducers can provide broad immune‑modulating effects such as antiviral, antibacterial, antitumor, and anti‑inflammatory actions
- These agents are not widely recognized or studied in Western mainstream medicine
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the takeaway is that thymogen and similar interferon inducers are available and may offer immune‑boosting benefits, but you’ll need to locate dosing guidelines, safety data, and regulatory status before adding them to a protocol.
Summary
The paper is a review that lists many drugs, including thymogen, that boost the body’s own interferon production. These compounds have been used for decades in former socialist countries for immune‑support, antiviral, anti‑cancer and anti‑inflammatory purposes, but they’re largely unknown in the West. No specific dosing or new efficacy data are given, so the information is mainly a heads‑up that such products exist.
Abstract
Interferons are first immunomodulatory molecules that have been shown to display a wide range of applications due to their antiviral, antibacterial, antitumor, and inflammatory activities. Natural and recombinant interferons are among most common biologic therapeutics worldwide. Interferon inducers, however, are less known and have been mostly developed and used in former socialist countries. Despite the fact that they are virtually unknown to the Western world, they represent a substantial market share of modern pharmacopoeia in former socialist republics. This review provides a brief description of most popular interferon inducers including Amyxin, Amizon, Anandin, Arbidol, Blasten, Cycloferon, Galavit, Groprinosine, Hepon, Immunoxel, Dzherelo, Kagocel, Larifan, Ligfol, Likopid, Mebavin, MIGI-KLP, V-5 Immunitor, SCV-07, Milife, Neovir, Poludan, Ragocin, Ridostin, Thymogen and Savratz, some of which were in use for several decades for the same clinical indications as for interferons. The variety and choice offered by the pharmaceutical industry behind the former "iron curtain" certainly deserves the appreciation, familiarity and application prospects for medical and research investigators worldwide.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-03-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.2174/138161209787846847
51