Longevity claims

Epithalon.

A longevity-claim tetrapeptide whose evidence rests largely on older Russian and animal studies — a case study in reading claims critically.

Longevity claimsInvestigationalSourced profile
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This is educational information, not medical advice, and The Peptide University does not sell peptides, supplies, or supplements. Many compounds discussed here are sold as “research chemicals” and are not approved for human use outside of clinical trials. Laws vary by country, and nothing here is a recommendation to obtain or use anything. Talk to a qualified clinician about your own situation.

● Investigational — not approved for human use

Epithalon (epitalon) is a synthetic tetrapeptide based on a pineal-gland peptide. It's experimental, unapproved, and marketed with anti-aging and telomerase claims.

How it works

It's proposed to influence telomerase activity and circadian/pineal signaling — the basis for “longevity” marketing. These mechanisms are largely from laboratory and animal work.

The evidence

Much of the evidence is older, from Russian research groups and animal studies, with little rigorous, independent human data. Extraordinary longevity claims rest on thin, hard-to-verify evidence — a reason for real skepticism.

Safety

Human safety is not well characterized in modern controlled studies. As an unapproved research chemical, both the compound's effects and what's actually in a given vial are open questions.

FAQ

QDoes it 'lengthen telomeres' / extend lifespan?

Those claims come mostly from limited animal and older studies; robust independent human evidence is lacking. Treat it as unproven.

QIs it approved?

No — experimental and unapproved.

Sources

This profile summarizes the following. Follow the links to read the originals — and remember that summaries age, so check for newer information.

Inclusion here is not endorsement of any source's claims; several are cited so you can compare how different outlets characterize the same evidence.

Questions & comments

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