- Acts as an adaptogen, interacting with the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis.
- Modulates neurological excitability reducing glutamate overactivity.
- Decreases stress-induced excessive Cortisol release.
- Promotes electroencephalographic brainwave profiles facilitating deep restorative sleep, though it does not "force" sleep like a sedative.
DSIP
Also known as: Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide
DSIP (Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide) is an endogenous neuropeptide, discovered in 1974, which, as its name suggests, was initially linked with promoting deep slow-wave (delta phase) sleep. Despite its name, it has been discovered to be a systemic adaptogenic neuromodulator that greatly reduces the body's reactivity to stress, balancing hormonal levels and reducing pain and withdrawal.
Mechanism of action
Uses & indications
- Insomnia and sleep: Dramatically improves the quality of REM and slow-wave sleep without "hangover" sedative effects.
- Stress management: Adaptogenic intervention to mitigate chronic fatigue and oxidative stress from high cortisol levels.
- Withdrawal syndrome: Used experimentally with high success to treat alcohol or opiate withdrawal syndromes.
Effects
Greater ease in falling asleep, profound feeling of rest, feeling of systemic calm, and reduction of morning anxiety.
Considerations & contraindications
- Its effect to induce sleep in people without deficiencies is not guaranteed; it works best stabilizing broken circadian rhythms.
- Can be injected 1 to 3 hours before bed to get better sleep architecture results.
Regulatory approval
Dosage
Storage
Technical data
Categories
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