Epitalon vs Thymalin
Epitalon (also called Epithalon) is a synthetic tetrapeptide developed from pineal-gland extract. Thymalin is a polypeptide complex from thymus tissue. Both emerged from the Khavinson longevity research program in Soviet/Russian gerontology. Different organ sources, different mechanisms — pineal / circadian for Epitalon, thymic / immune for Thymalin.
Epitalon targets pineal / circadian / telomerase research — primarily sleep and chronobiology endpoints. Thymalin targets thymic / immune-system research — T-cell output, immune rejuvenation. Stacked together they hit the two classic Khavinson 'organ peptide' axes that the original Russian research programs paired.
Contender A
Epitalon
Also: Epithalon
Synthetic tetrapeptide (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly) — modulates pineal function, melatonin rhythm, and shows telomerase-upregulation signals in preclinical work.
- Half-life
- ~30 min plasma
- Primary use
- Pineal / circadian / telomere research
- Dose range
- 5-10 mg SubQ daily for 10-20 days, cycled
- Cost tier
- $ · Low sourcing cost
Contender B
Thymalin
Polypeptide complex extracted from thymus tissue — modulates T-cell differentiation, thymic output, and immune-system homeostasis.
- Half-life
- ~30 min plasma, tissue effect longer
- Primary use
- Thymic / immune-rejuvenation research
- Dose range
- 5-20 mg SubQ daily for 10-15 days, cycled
- Cost tier
- $$ · Moderate sourcing cost
Detailed Comparison
10 attributes side-by-side. Highlighted rows show where one tool has a clear structural edge.
| Attribute | Epithalon | Thymalin | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|
Source organ | Pineal | Thymus | Tie |
Peptide structure Defined structure makes Epitalon a cleaner research molecule. | Defined tetrapeptide | Complex polypeptide mixture | Epithalon |
Research target | Circadian / telomere | Immune / T-cell | Tie |
Melatonin rhythm effect | Strong | None | Epithalon |
T-cell / immune effect | None direct | Strong | B |
Evidence base | Russian studies + experimental human | Russian clinical use + experimental | Tie |
Cycling pattern | 10-20 days on, months off | 10-15 days on, months off | Tie |
Side-effect profile | Very clean | Very clean | Tie |
Research-sourcing cost | Low | Moderate | Epithalon |
Dose consistency across vendors | High (defined molecule) | Variable (complex extract) | Epithalon |
Practitioner Notes
Sourced from DoseCraft's 10,000+ hour practitioner corpus — not PubMed abstracts.
The Khavinson Russian longevity research program paired organ-specific peptides across multiple tissues — pineal (Epitalon), thymus (Thymalin), prostate (Prostatilen), brain (Cortexin), and others. The framing isn't one vs the other; it's which organ axis your research question targets.
In protocols we've audited, Epitalon is the more commonly run of the two because the research endpoints (circadian rhythm, sleep architecture, telomere length in followup work) are easier to measure. Thymalin protocols tend to show up specifically in immunosenescence research and in older research subjects where T-cell output is a specific endpoint.
The structural difference matters for protocol reproducibility. Epitalon is a defined tetrapeptide — Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly, same molecule from every research vendor. Thymalin is a polypeptide extract from thymus tissue, and the exact composition varies by source material and processing. Researchers running reproducibility-sensitive protocols favor defined-structure peptides like Epitalon for that reason.
Cycling matters for both. These aren't continuous-use tools — the Khavinson program ran them as 10-20 day cycles every 3-6 months. Continuous daily use doesn't appear in the source literature and isn't how the molecules were characterized.
Stacking & Switching
Can these be combined? Should you switch from one to the other? Titration considerations.
Stack compatibility: See the “Stacks well” or “Stack compatibility” row in the comparison table above. When the edge column shows Tie, both compounds run together cleanly. When one compound dominates, check the protocol notes for the specific stacking pattern practitioners use.
Switching protocol: The general pattern across practitioner protocols: hold the current dose stable, introduce the new compound at its lowest titration step, run both for a 1-2 week cross-over window, then taper the original. Abrupt switches produce rebound effects as the original compound's steady state clears.
Half-life math: DoseCraft's PK-aware AI models half-life decay and stack overlap across every pairing above. The 20x20 interaction matrix flags contraindications automatically — no manual math, no overlapping-signal blindspots.
Frequently Asked Questions
Indexed for SERP FAQPage rich results.
Is Epitalon really a 'telomerase activator'?
+
Preclinical data shows telomerase activation and telomere extension signals. The human evidence is thinner and comes mostly from the Khavinson group's Russian studies. Practitioner protocols treat this as a real but under-validated mechanism.
What's the difference between Thymalin, Thymosin Alpha-1, and TB-500?
+
Thymalin is a polypeptide extract from thymus tissue. Thymosin Alpha-1 is a defined peptide isolated from that class. TB-500 is Thymosin Beta-4 fragment — same organ source but structurally and functionally unrelated to Alpha-1 / Thymalin.
Do I cycle these or run continuously?
+
Cycle. The Khavinson source protocols are 10-20 day cycles every few months, not continuous. Continuous use isn't how either molecule was characterized in the research.
Can I stack Epitalon and Thymalin?
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Yes — they hit completely different organ axes, no mechanistic overlap. Practitioners running 'full Khavinson stack' protocols run both in overlapping or sequenced cycles.
Which is better for sleep?
+
Epitalon, clearly — it acts on the pineal / melatonin axis directly. Thymalin has no direct sleep mechanism.
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Track your protocol with PK-aware AI in DoseCraftResearch-only disclaimer: This comparison is for research and educational purposes only. Peptides referenced are sold for research use by third-party suppliers. Not evaluated by the FDA. Not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult a licensed physician before acting on any peptide protocol information.