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Biblioteca de Investigación Immune Support
Immune Support

Thymalin

A thymic peptide complex studied for its potential to restore immune function that declines as the thymus gland shrinks with age.

También conocido como Thymus Extract Peptide, Vilon (in some research contexts)
Tipo Thymic Polypeptide Complex
Área de Investigación Immune Restoration, Thymic Function, Aging & Longevity Investigación
Status Solo para Investigación
Molecular structure of Thymalin — animated Molecular structure of Thymalin
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3D Animated Structure
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What is it?

Thymalin is a peptide complex derived from thymic tissue — the gland that trains your immune system's T-cells. It was developed by Russian scientists in the 1970s as part of a broad research effort into thymic peptides and immune restoration. Unlike Thymosin Alpha-1 (which is a single, precisely defined peptide), Thymalin is a complex of peptides extracted from thymic tissue, containing multiple bioactive components.

It's been studied in the context of immune aging — the gradual decline of immune function that accompanies getting older. As the thymus gland involutes (shrinks with age), the body produces fewer and fewer trained T-cells, leaving the aging immune system less agile. Thymalin research has focused on whether supplementing with thymic peptides can help restore or maintain immune competence in aged laboratory subjects.

The research lineage behind Thymalin is particularly notable. Russian biogerontologists built a substantial body of published work around thymic peptide bioregulators beginning in the 1970s and continuing through today. Thymalin sits at the center of that tradition as one of the most extensively studied compounds in that research program.

Because Thymalin is a complex rather than a single defined peptide, it presents interesting challenges for researchers — its activity profile may be broader and more varied than single-peptide analogs, but it is also more difficult to fully characterize at the molecular level.

Por qué interesa a los investigadores

Thymalin occupies a unique position in immune aging research as one of the most extensively studied thymic peptide complexes in the published literature.

  • Russian clinical studies (published in peer-reviewed journals) examined Thymalin in elderly populations for immune restoration, with some publications reporting improvements in immune markers over extended periods.
  • Thymalin has been studied alongside other peptide bioregulators in longevity research frameworks — particularly in work by the St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology.
  • The thymus gland's decline with age is one of the most well-documented aspects of immune aging — thymic peptides are one of the primary tools researchers use to study this process.
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How It Works

Thymalin contains a mixture of thymic polypeptides that collectively stimulate T-lymphocyte maturation and proliferation. It appears to work through the same thymic hormone pathways that naturally promote T-cell development — essentially trying to replicate what a healthy thymus does. The peptides in Thymalin interact with thymic epithelial cell receptors and influence the differentiation of immature T-cell precursors into functional T-lymphocytes. Investigación has also noted effects on natural killer (NK) cell activity and cytokine production, suggesting Thymalin's influence extends beyond T-cell populations alone.

Think of it like this 🧠

Think of the thymus as a military academy that trains soldiers (T-cells) for the immune army. As you age, the academy gets smaller and trains fewer and fewer soldiers. Thymalin is like opening a satellite training facility — it carries the training protocols from the original academy and tries to keep the soldier-production line running even as the original school shrinks.

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Contexto de Protocolo de Investigación

Investigación Renuncia de responsabilidad: Lo siguiente refleja investigación clínica y preclínica publicada y no es consejo médico. Consulta a un profesional de la salud licenciado antes de tomar decisiones de salud.

Thymalin was developed by Khavinson and colleagues in the Soviet/Russian research program on thymic peptide bioregulators. Published clinical use in Russia — particularly in elderly immune restoration contexts — provides documented clinical protocols.

Dosing Ranges from Published Investigación
Russian Clinical (IM) Khavinson et al. published clinical protocols administering Thymalin 10 mg IM daily for 10 days as a course, repeated 2–3 times per year. Immunological endpoints (T-lymphocyte counts, NK cell activity) were measured before and after each 10-day course (Khavinson VKh, 2002, Bull Exp Biol Med).
Longevity Investigación The 20-year follow-up study by Morozov et al. (2010, Bull Exp Biol Med) tracked elderly subjects who had received Thymalin 10 mg IM for 10 days/year across multiple years. Mortality and immune function were primary endpoints.
Routes, Duration & Timing
IntramuscularStandard route in Russian clinical literature. 10-day course protocols used daily IM injection.
TimelineImmunological improvements (T-cell counts, NK activity) measured at end of 10-day course. Repeated dosing courses maintained benefits in the long-term follow-up study.
StorageLyophilized form stored at −20°C. Reconstituted in saline for IM injection.

Referencias Clave: Khavinson VKh (2002). Thymic peptide bioregulators. Bull Exp Biol Med. · Morozov VG et al. (2010). 20-year Thymalin follow-up study. Bull Exp Biol Med.

Datos Interesantes

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Thymalin was developed in the Soviet Union as part of a major government-funded research program into peptide bioregulators — one of the most extensive peptide research programs in history.

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A notable 20-year follow-up study by Russian researchers tracked subjects who had received thymic peptides (including Thymalin) and examined long-term health outcomes — an unusually long observation period for peptide research.

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The thymus gland is at its largest during childhood and begins shrinking (involuting) after puberty. By age 65, most people have less than 15% of their original thymic tissue remaining.

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Documentación COA y de Lotes

Every batch of Thymalin with full Certificate of Analysis documentation. Third-party HPLC verification, mass spectrometry confirmation, and sterility testing results are included with each batch.

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HPLC Certificate
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Mass Spec Analysis
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Purity Report
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Sterility Test
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