Page 1 of 1

DSIP 6-week personal log - this thing genuinely surprised me (long post, grab a snack)

Posted: Mon Mar 09, 2026 11:00 am
by biohack_bella_87
okay so I've been meaning to write this up for WEEKS and I finally have enough data to feel like I can speak intelligently about it. I listened to like three different episodes on peptides for sleep before I even ordered DSIP - specifically the one where Ben Greenfield breaks down sleep architecture peptides and also a really good deep dive on the Huberman adjacent stuff about delta wave optimization - and honestly I went in with moderate expectations because I've tried everything for sleep. like EVERYTHING. magnesium glycinate, L-theanine stacks, phosphatidylserine before bed, glycine, even did a whole month of low dose melatonin which I regret because of the receptor downregulation thing.

so DSIP for context is Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide, it's actually a nonapeptide which means nine amino acids, and it was originally isolated from rabbit cerebral venous blood in the 70s which is a wild origin story honestly. the mechanism is still not super well understood which I know makes some people uncomfortable but honestly a lot of the most interesting biohacking compounds sit in that grey zone of "we know it does something, we're still figuring out the full picture"

MY PROTOCOL:

I started at 100mcg subcutaneous about 30 min before bed. kept it there for two weeks just to establish baseline. weeks three and four I bumped to 200mcg. final two weeks back down to 100mcg to see if there was any difference coming back to the lower dose after exposure.

I was tracking with my Oura ring the whole time which I know isn't perfect data but it's consistent data and that's what matters for personal n=1 experiments. also keeping a sleep journal because sometimes the felt experience doesn't match the ring data and both data points matter.

WEEKS 1-2 at 100mcg:

honestly the first three nights I didn't notice much. maybe slightly easier to fall asleep but I was also being really strict about my sleep hygiene during this period so I couldn't fully attribute anything. night four though was genuinely different. I woke up and just felt... clean? like that foggy weird feeling I usually have in the first 20 minutes was significantly reduced. my Oura was showing slightly improved deep sleep percentages, nothing dramatic, like going from roughly 15% to maybe 19-20% deep sleep which doesn't sound like a lot but for me that is meaningful.

the other thing I noticed and I don't see people talk about this enough - the QUALITY of the sleep felt different before I even looked at the ring data. there's a subjective phenomenology to good sleep that I think we undervalue in all our quantification obsession. Dave Asprey actually talks about this in the context of felt recovery versus measured recovery and I think he's onto something real there.

week two I also noticed I was having more vivid but not stressful dreams which is interesting because that could indicate REM changes even though DSIP is supposed to be primarily about delta/deep sleep. or maybe I was just sleeping deeply enough that I was hitting REM more efficiently. still not sure what to make of that.

WEEKS 3-4 at 200mcg:

this is where it got genuinely interesting. the deep sleep numbers on Oura improved more noticeably. I was consistently hitting 21-24% deep sleep which for me is almost unheard of. my HRV which I use as a recovery proxy was trending upward over this period, not dramatically but consistently. I started noticing cognitive effects I wasn't expecting - like not during the day necessarily but in terms of mental clarity during my morning routine and my focus during fasted morning work blocks was better than it's been in a while.

I also want to be honest about the negatives here because I think a lot of people write these reviews and only talk about the good stuff. at 200mcg I had two nights where I felt almost too heavy going to sleep, like an unusual sedation quality that felt slightly different from natural tiredness. not scary but notable. also had one night of very disrupted sleep at the 200mcg dose which could have been completely unrelated to the peptide but I'm logging it because intellectual honesty is the whole point.

WEEKS 5-6 back to 100mcg:

really interesting data here. felt experience and ring data stayed elevated even back at the lower dose. which makes me think either there's some cumulative effect happening, or my sleep was genuinely being recalibrated somehow, or honestly it could be the habits I'd built around sleep during the experiment period. this is the confounding variable problem with any self experiment. you can't control for everything. you can only try to be rigorous and honest about what you're observing.

HRV kept climbing. I ended the six weeks with my best 7-day average HRV in probably 8 months which again, confounders exist, but the correlation is there.

STACKING NOTES:

I did try stacking it briefly with low dose glycine (3g) in week four and I think that might have contributed to the heavy sedation feeling so I dropped the glycine during the DSIP nights. also considered adding it to a stack with BPC-157 that I was running concurrently for a minor connective tissue thing and from what I've read there's no specific reason those would interact negatively but I kept the administration times separated just to be cautious.

I have NOT tried stacking with epithalon yet which I know is the obvious next step everyone suggests for anti-aging sleep protocol purposes and I'm planning that for Q1 of next year. will absolutely document and post.

OVERALL THOUGHTS:

this peptide is genuinely underrated in the community conversation. everyone is talking about BPC and TB4 and semax and selank and for good reason, those are incredible compounds. but DSIP kind of sits quietly in the background and the sleep research angle is so important because sleep is foundational. like Andrew Huberman says sleep is the foundation on which everything else sits and I believe that completely. if your sleep is broken your peptide stack for cognition is working at maybe 60% of what it could be.

would I run it again? yes, without hesitation. probably as a 4-6 week cycle once or twice a year during seasons where my sleep is most disrupted. not as a permanent daily thing because I'm always thinking about receptor sensitivity and not wanting to create dependencies.

if anyone has run DSIP with different dosing strategies or has experience with the intranasal route versus subQ I would genuinely love to compare notes. also curious if anyone has run bloodwork before and after specifically looking at cortisol markers because I have a theory about what DSIP might be doing to the cortisol rhythm that I want to explore more.

okay that's the whole log, told you to grab a snack lol

Re: DSIP 6-week personal log - this thing genuinely surprised me (long post, grab a snack)

Posted: Mon Mar 09, 2026 11:45 am
by GrumpyOldResearcher
Rabbit blood, Huberman, Dave Asprey, AND Ben Greenfield all in one post. You really collected the whole set.

DSIP is interesting though, I'll give you that. The cortisol angle you mentioned at the end is actually the more compelling research direction than the delta wave stuff everyone fixates on. Look into the somatostatin interactions if you haven't already. That's where it gets less boring.

Re: DSIP 6-week personal log - this thing genuinely surprised me (long post, grab a snack)

Posted: Mon Mar 09, 2026 12:00 pm
by peptide_n00b_2023
biohack_bella_87 wrote:would I run it again? yes, without hesitation. probably as a 4-6 week cycle once or twice a year during seasons where my sleep is most disrupted. not as a permanent daily thing because I'm always thinking about receptor sensitivity and not wanting to create dependencies.
hey, really appreciate you writing all this up, it's genuinely helpful for someone like me who is just starting to look into DSIP. not sure if this is dumb to even bring up because you clearly have way more experience than I do, but I actually want to politely push back on one thing if that's okay?

the bit about running it seasonally specifically to avoid receptor sensitivity concerns - I think I understand the logic and it sounds reasonable, but from what I've been reading (and I'm very much a beginner so please correct me if I'm way off base) there isn't a ton of evidence that DSIP actually causes the kind of receptor downregulation you'd see with something like exogenous melatonin or even traditional sleep aids. like the mechanism is different enough that the seasonal cycling rationale might not be strictly necessary for that particular reason.

I could be totally wrong about this and maybe you've read stuff I haven't, which is entirely possible. I'm not saying cycling is bad at all, there might be other good reasons for it that I'm just not aware of yet as a newbie.
GrumpyOldResearcher wrote:The cortisol angle you mentioned at the end is actually the more compelling research direction than the delta wave stuff everyone fixates on.
also seconding this, even as someone who barely understands somatostatin interactions yet. the cortisol thing was the part of the original post that made me sit up straighter honestly.

sorry if my pushback on the cycling thing was off base, genuinely just trying to understand this stuff better

Re: DSIP 6-week personal log - this thing genuinely surprised me (long post, grab a snack)

Posted: Mon Mar 09, 2026 12:45 pm
by IronGutPeptideBro
yo okay I gotta jump in here because I've actually run DSIP twice now and I stand by the cycling approach even if the receptor downregulation science isn't perfectly nailed down for this specific peptide
peptide_n00b_2023 wrote:from what I've been reading there isn't a ton of evidence that DSIP actually causes the kind of receptor downregulation you'd see with something like exogenous melatonin or even traditional sleep aids
look you're not WRONG that the mechanism is different, and I respect that you're actually reading and not just vibing on broscience. but here's the thing man - the receptor downregulation argument isn't even the main reason I cycle it and I think bella might be in the same boat. its more about just... keeping things working. like when I ran my first DSIP log I noticed the effects were sharpest in weeks 2-4 and by week 7 when I pushed it longer it just felt kinda muted? not gone but muted. could be a million things, could be adaptation at some level we dont fully understand yet, could be my sleep hygiene got lazy because I was relying on the peptide, idk

but thats exactly the point lol. we DONT know enough about the full mechanism to be confident either way so why would you run it continuously just because we cant prove downregulation exists. thats like saying you should leave your car engine running 24/7 because theres no specific study proving it causes damage in YOUR car

the precautionary principle is real and its not paranoia, its just sensible when youre dealing with compounds that have limited human data

also the cumulative effect bella described in weeks 5-6 actually SUPPORTS cycling imo. if the benefits carry over then you dont NEED to run it constantly. take the W and let your system breathe

GrumpyOldResearcher is right about the somatostatin stuff btw, thats where my head has been going too. the cortisol rhythm angle is WAY more interesting than people give it credit for and I think it might explain the HRV improvements more than the delta wave stuff does directly

great log bella, seriously. this is the kind of post this community needs more of

Re: DSIP 6-week personal log - this thing genuinely surprised me (long post, grab a snack)

Posted: Mon Mar 09, 2026 1:00 pm
by GrumpyOldResearcher
IronGutPeptideBro wrote:thats like saying you should leave your car engine running 24/7 because theres no specific study proving it causes damage in YOUR car
I've been doing exactly that for 30 years and my engine is fine.

Re: DSIP 6-week personal log - this thing genuinely surprised me (long post, grab a snack)

Posted: Tue Mar 10, 2026 11:00 am
by SupplierSkeptic99
IronGutPeptideBro wrote:the precautionary principle is real and its not paranoia, its just sensible when youre dealing with compounds that have limited human data
I want to respectfully push back on a couple of things here, and I want to be clear upfront that I'm not dismissing the overall quality of the original log - biohack_bella_87 put in genuine effort here and the intellectual honesty about confounders is something I actually respect and don't see often enough in these posts.

That said.

On the cycling rationale: I think IronGutPeptideBro and the original poster are conflating two separate arguments in a way that muddies the logic a bit. The precautionary principle argument and the receptor downregulation argument are not the same thing, and I've seen them get collapsed into one position in this community fairly often. peptide_n00b_2023 is actually making a reasonable distinction that's worth taking seriously rather than absorbing into a broader "well we don't know enough so cycle it anyway" framework.

My issue isn't with cycling per se - cycling is often defensible for reasons that have nothing to do with receptor sensitivity. It's that when we justify practices with reasoning that may not be mechanistically accurate, we're building a knowledge base on slightly crooked foundations. Over time that matters.
IronGutPeptideBro wrote:by week 7 when I pushed it longer it just felt kinda muted?
This is genuinely useful observational data and I don't want to dismiss it. But "muted effect over time" has multiple plausible explanations and receptor downregulation is only one of them. Habituation to improved sleep quality is a real phenomenon where you simply stop noticing what has become your new baseline. That explanation is at least as parsimonious as receptor adaptation given the current literature on DSIP, which is honestly pretty thin on mechanistic human data to begin with.

One thing I want to flag that I haven't seen anyone address: the Oura ring data throughout this log is being treated with a level of confidence I'd pump the brakes on. Consistent data is not the same as accurate data and the way Oura calculates deep sleep specifically has known issues that become more pronounced when you're actively modifying sleep with compounds that may affect the physiological signals the ring is using to make its classifications. I'm not saying the data is worthless. I'm saying "consistent direction of change" and "accurate measurement of actual sleep architecture" are different claims and the log seems to move between them without flagging that distinction.

The subjective phenomenology point from the original post is actually where I think the most credible signal lives in this log, and I appreciate that it was mentioned. That said I'd be curious what the sourcing situation was here because that's always the variable nobody wants to talk about in these n=1 logs and it matters enormously for interpreting any of this.

Re: DSIP 6-week personal log - this thing genuinely surprised me (long post, grab a snack)

Posted: Tue Mar 10, 2026 11:45 am
by T_Ortega_Lifts
SupplierSkeptic99 wrote:I think IronGutPeptideBro and the original poster are conflating two separate arguments in a way that muddies the logic a bit. The precautionary principle argument and the receptor downregulation argument are not the same thing
You're not wrong about the conflation, and the distinction is fair. But I'd push back on how much weight you're putting on it.

Here's where I see it differently. In practice, when someone is designing their own cycling protocol for a compound with thin human data, the specific mechanistic reason they're cycling matters less than whether cycling is the right call in the first place. And for DSIP, it probably is. Not because we've proven downregulation, but because:

- The human data is genuinely sparse
- Observational reports like bella's and IronGutPeptideBro's consistently show a pattern of diminishing returns past a certain window
- The cumulative carry-over effect actually makes continuous use redundant anyway

Cycling here isn't built on crooked logic. It's built on incomplete data, which is a different problem with a different solution. The solution isn't "continue until proven harmful." It's "use conservatively until you have reason to do otherwise."
SupplierSkeptic99 wrote:Habituation to improved sleep quality is a real phenomenon where you simply stop noticing what has become your new baseline
This is a legitimate point and probably underappreciated in these discussions. Agreed.
SupplierSkeptic99 wrote:the Oura ring data throughout this log is being treated with a level of confidence I'd pump the brakes on
I'll actually give you this one more than the cycling argument. Oura's deep sleep classification isn't polysomnography. The subjective data in this log is probably cleaner signal than the ring percentages. Bella even flagged that herself which I thought was the most credible part of the write-up.

Good log, good thread. The sourcing question at the end is valid too, though I doubt we'll get a direct answer.

Re: DSIP 6-week personal log - this thing genuinely surprised me (long post, grab a snack)

Posted: Tue Mar 10, 2026 12:00 pm
by IronGutPeptideBro
yo T_Ortega basically said what I was gonna say but let me add to this because SupplierSkeptic99 is coming at me specifically and I wanna address it directly
SupplierSkeptic99 wrote:I think IronGutPeptideBro and the original poster are conflating two separate arguments in a way that muddies the logic a bit. The precautionary principle argument and the receptor downregulation argument are not the same thing
okay yeah fair, I'll actually give you that point. you're right that I kind of smooshed those two things together in my earlier post. but here's the thing - I wasn't using receptor downregulation as MY primary argument, I was responding to peptide_n00b bringing it up. my actual position was always more about precautionary cycling + the diminishing returns I personally observed past week 6. so we're not actually as far apart as you're making it sound lol
SupplierSkeptic99 wrote:"muted effect over time" has multiple plausible explanations and receptor downregulation is only one of them. Habituation to improved sleep quality is a real phenomenon
this is a genuinely good point and I'm not gonna pretend otherwise. T_Ortega already conceded it and so do I. habituation to your new baseline is ABSOLUTELY a thing. I've experienced it with other compounds too. doesn't change my conclusion though - whether the muting is receptor adaptation OR habituation, the practical answer is the same. take a break, come back, see if you get the sharp response again. I did on my second run btw. fresh response, first couple weeks hit noticeably again. make of that what you will

the Oura criticism is valid too and bella even flagged it herself which is exactly why I called the log solid. she wasn't overclaiming the ring data

I'm standing by cycling being the right call here. the mechanistic reasoning behind it being slightly imprecise doesn't make the behavior wrong