What did @juulianbecerra actually say?
The creator filmed himself taking two peptides, semax and selank, then timed how long it took to write and film a YouTube video. His baseline was three and a half hours. After dosing, he finished in one hour and thirty-seven minutes. He described "memory recall and sentence formation" flowing smoother, but pointedly said he did not feel stimulated the way caffeine or Adderall makes him feel. He framed semax as something that "flips on the focus and motivation switch" and selank as killing "mental noise" like an anti-anxiety compound. He claimed the two together create a "synergistic effect." The self-experiment framing is honest in one sense: he never pretended this was a clinical trial. But it also means his conclusions rest entirely on one data point, his own experience, during one task, on one day, with no control condition.
Does the science back this up?
Partially, but the evidence base is thin and almost entirely from Russian research institutions with no independent replication in Western peer-reviewed literature. Semax is a synthetic analog of ACTH(4-7), originally developed in Russia in the 1980s. Animal studies show it increases BDNF and dopaminergic activity in the prefrontal cortex. Selank is a synthetic analog of tuftsin with anxiolytic properties studied in Russian clinical settings.
- Semax has shown cognitive-enhancing effects in rat models of stroke and ischemia (Bobyntsev et al., 2015, Neuropeptides), but healthy human cognition data is scarce.
- Selank demonstrated anxiolytic effects comparable to phenazepam in small Russian clinical trials (Semenova et al., 2010, Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine), without sedation, which aligns with the creator's "no feel" observation.
- The "synergy" claim has no published pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic data supporting it in humans. That does not mean it is false, it means nobody has tested it rigorously.
Extrapolating rodent neuropeptide studies to a healthy 20-something's YouTube workflow is a significant leap.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
He got the mechanisms roughly right, but oversimplified them in ways that matter. Calling semax something that "speeds up how fast you process and recall info" treats a theoretical BDNF-upregulation mechanism as a proven, direct cognitive output. That is not what the studies show, especially not in healthy subjects.
He also got something meaningfully right: his observation that the compounds did not produce a stimulant feeling is consistent with selank's pharmacology. Unlike benzodiazepines, selank modulates GABAergic transmission without the sedation or dependency signals, and unlike amphetamines, semax does not directly release catecholamines. His subjective experience is plausible given the pharmacology, even if we cannot confirm it caused his faster output.
What he got wrong: the self-experiment design is so confounded it proves nothing. Variables include time of day, task familiarity, motivation to perform on camera, and simple practice effects. Cutting a task time in half once is not evidence that a compound works. It is an anecdote with a timer.
What should you actually know?
Semax and selank are not FDA-approved for any indication in the United States. They are not scheduled controlled substances, which puts them in a legal gray area. Several compounding pharmacies sell them, but quality control, purity, and dosing consistency vary considerably with no mandatory testing standards applied uniformly across suppliers.
The absence of a stimulant feeling is not proof of safety. Both peptides act on neuropeptide systems that are not well-characterized in long-term human use. Selank's GABAergic activity means dependency questions are not fully answered. Semax influences BDNF, which has complex roles in mood, anxiety, and even tumor biology in some animal models.
Anyone considering these compounds should discuss them with a clinician who understands peptide pharmacology, not just replicate a TikTok timer experiment. The creator's experience is interesting as anecdote. It is not a reason to dose yourself.