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Two sister peptides from the same Cold War lab, one calms the emotional floor, the other raises the cognitive ceiling. The mechanistic case for stacking them is architecturally compelling. The clinical evidence for the combination doesn't exist yet.
Selank and Semax are sister heptapeptides engineered with the same glyproline stability tail but from opposite parent molecules, tuftsin (immune) and ACTH (stress). They converge on BDNF through completely different upstream pathways, covering complementary neurochemical territory. This article examines the mechanistic case for combining them, the cofactors that determine whether either signal lands, and where the evidence stops short.
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