Peptide Therapy Foundations: Sleep Hygiene
A clinical look at the peptides studied for sleep and nighttime physiology.
Course Overview
What this course covers
This course examines the peptides connected to sleep and the nighttime environment: the agents studied for their influence on sleep architecture, melatonin signaling, and the restorative processes that occur overnight. It is written for clinicians who want to understand how these agents relate to sleep physiology and how cautiously the evidence behind them should be read.
The lessons cover three agents. DSIP, the delta sleep-inducing peptide, is a nonapeptide studied for its effects on sleep regulation and stress signaling. Epitalon and Pinealon are short pineal-derived peptides studied for melatonin support and the regulation of circadian and nighttime processes. Each illustrates a different way the sleep environment can be addressed.
Each lesson follows the same clinical lens: what the agent is, how it works, what the evidence shows, and what a practitioner weighs before applying it. Together they map the sleep peptides as a group so you can reason about each one against the others and against the limits of the data.
What you'll explore
- Describe how DSIP is studied in the context of sleep regulation
- Explain the pineal-derived roles of Epitalon and Pinealon in melatonin support
- Weigh the strength and limits of the evidence behind each agent
- Apply a consistent clinical framework when evaluating a sleep peptide
William Seeds, MD
For more than four decades, Dr. William A. Seeds has advanced medical science through clinical practice, research, and physician education. A board-certified Orthopaedic Surgeon in General and Sports Medicine, he served as Chief of Surgery at University Hospitals Conneaut Medical Center and Director of The Ohio Bone & Joint Institute before founding the Seeds Scientific Research & Performance (SSRP) Institute. He is also Founder and Medical Director of the Redox Medical Group in Beverly Hills and the bestselling author of Peptide Protocols, The Redox Promise, and The Quantum Power of GLP-1 Peptides. His contributions to sports medicine have been recognized at the NFL Hall of Fame, and he has consulted for athletes across the NFL, NHL, MLB, NBA, and Dancing with the Stars.