[Age features of bioregulatory therapy of dental diseases.].
Pinelis. I S IS; Pinelis. Y I YI; Kuznik. B I BI; Iordanishvili. A K AK; Vasiliev. M A MA
Key Findings
- Peptide thymomimetics (thymalin, thymogen, etc.) have immunopharmacological effects that could support healing in oral inflammation and trauma.
- These peptides are suggested as part of a combined therapy for dental diseases in the elderly, aiming to improve tissue homeostasis.
- The review highlights both natural and synthetic peptide sources, but does not provide specific dosing or clinical trial outcomes.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the take‑away is that thymogen and similar peptides are being explored for oral health support, especially in older adults, but the evidence is still mostly theoretical. Until more concrete dosing and efficacy data emerge, these peptides should be considered experimental and used with caution.
Summary
The paper reviews how peptide bioregulators such as thymalin, thymogen, and others may help treat dental and maxillofacial problems, especially in older people. It focuses on their immune‑modulating and protective effects rather than giving new experimental data.
Abstract
The article presents data on the use of peptide bioregulators of cell homeostasis and the protective functions of the body in various dental diseases and pathology of organs and tissues of the maxillofacial region. Issues related to the immunopharmacological effect and clinical use of natural and synthetic peptide thymomimetics (thymalin, thymogen, vilon, epithalamin, cortexin) and peptide bioregulators from cartilaginous (sigumir, chondrolux) and other tissues in case of trauma, as well as inflammatory, inflammatory and other pathological processes of tissues of the oral cavity and maxillofacial region. Particular attention is paid to their use in the complex treatment of dental diseases in the elderly.
Study Information
pubmed
2020