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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 2
1985 pubmed

Intestinal lymphangiectasia and thymic hypoplasia.

Sorensen. R U RU; Halpin. T C TC; Abramowsky. C R CR; Hornick. D L DL; Miller. K M KM; Naylor. P P; Incefy. G S GS

Key Findings

  • Intestinal lymphangiectasia caused massive loss of T‑cells and low thymosin‑alpha‑1 levels.
  • Daily thymosin fraction 5 gave a brief clinical improvement, but weekly dosing was ineffective and lymphocyte numbers did not increase.
  • The findings imply that T‑cells are needed to maintain thymic tissue, and loss of T‑cells can lead to secondary thymic atrophy.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, thymosin‑alpha‑1 may offer only short‑term symptom relief and does not reliably restore T‑cell numbers in severe loss scenarios. Daily dosing appears necessary for any effect, but overall benefits are limited, so it should not be relied on as a primary immune‑boosting strategy.

Summary

This case report describes a child with severe gut‑related loss of T‑cells and a tiny thymus, who had very low levels of thymosin‑alpha‑1. Giving a thymosin‑containing preparation every day helped a bit for a short time, but weekly doses didn’t work and the T‑cell count never rose. The study suggests that simply adding thymosin‑alpha‑1 isn’t enough to rebuild the immune system when T‑cells are being lost in large amounts.

Abstract

We have evaluated the immunological abnormalities present in a 6 year old patient with primary intestinal and generalized lymphangiectasia confirmed by intestinal, lung and lymph node biopsies. Lymphocyte loss through the gut was confirmed by the detection of lymphocytes in her stool. An increased enteric protein loss was suggested by hypoproteinaemia, peripheral oedema, and a very short half-life for i.v. immune serum globulin (3 days). Lymphocyte subpopulation analysis revealed a selective loss of T lymphocytes, with a proportionally increased loss of the OKT4 positive helper/inducer subpopulation. Functionally, there was a decrease in proliferative responses to some mitogens and to allogeneic cells, and a lack of T cell help for in vitro B lymphocyte differentiation into immunoglobulin secreting cells. Natural killer function was normal. In this patient, a concomitant thymic deficiency was documented by failure to identify thymic tissue on a thymus biopsy and by an absence or decrease of the serum thymic factor (thymulin) and thymosin alpha 1. No compensatory lymphopoiesis was detected in the bone marrow. In an attempt to increase T lymphocyte development, the patient was treated with thymosin fraction 5. Daily treatment with this preparation resulted in a transient clinical improvement which could not be sustained on a weekly thymosin treatment schedule. However, lymphocyte numbers did not increase during this treatment. The findings in this patient support the notion that T lymphocytes are needed to stimulate thymic epithelium. In situations of excessive loss of long lived T lymphocytes a secondary thymic atrophy may occur and further contribute to the development of a deficiency in cell-mediated immunity.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1985