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Why people use Semax for neuroprotection
Family history of dementia. Semax for prevention? The short answer: yes, this is one of the more-discussed uses for Semax - but the evidence quality and the right protocol depend on what you're actually trying to fix.
This page covers what's known, what's not, and what the editorial take is for normal humans considering Semax for neuroprotection.
What the evidence says
Evidence tier: Moderate animal evidence. Reasonable animal evidence; mechanism plausible but human translation is unproven.
- Animal models show Semax raises BDNF and protects against ischemic damage.
- Russian work in mild cognitive impairment showed modest improvement in memory testing.
- Honest read: stronger evidence base than Pinealon, weaker than Cerebrolysin.
Protocol notes
Intranasal 600mcg per day for 14 days, repeated every 3-6 months.
Always with a sports-medicine doctor, telehealth provider, or specialist sign-off. Self-experimenting on injection schedules without clinical input is the most common way people waste money and get hurt.
What to skip
- Vendors without a Certificate of Analysis (COA). Random gym-bro vendors with no third-party testing. The peptide market has a quality-control problem; the answer is COA per peptide, every time.
- Pre-mixed blends from non-pharmacy sources. Compounding pharmacies that produce pre-mixed combinations with COAs are fine. Random vendor "stack vials" are not.
- Massively over-dosed protocols. More is rarely better with peptides. Receptor saturation is real. Stick to evidence-based dosing.
Where to go next
- Full Semax directory entry - status, sourcing, studies, what to skip
- What are peptides - if you skipped the foundation
- How peptides actually work - mechanism in plain English
- The Tier List - which ones to take seriously
- Subscribe to the dispatch
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Last reviewed · 2026-05-07 · Page generated by Protocol One matrix engine