What did @colbert_fitnes8 actually say?
The creator claims that a 150-microgram subcutaneous injection of DSIP, a neuropeptide discovered in the 1970s, produced one of the "deepest states of sleep" he can remember within 25 minutes. He reports no grogginess, vivid dreaming, and rapid return to deep sleep after waking. He suggests starting around 100 micrograms and titrating up, and warns that "quality means everything" because many vendors source low-grade product from overseas. His conclusion: this is a "game changer" after years of failed sleep supplements.
To be fair, he's not making wild pharmaceutical claims. He's describing a personal experience, flagging sourcing concerns, and acknowledging that individual response will vary. That's more responsible than most sleep-peptide content on TikTok. But personal anecdote is a long way from evidence, and there are regulatory and safety issues here that the video skips entirely.
Does the science back this up?
The honest answer is: barely, and not in humans with modern methodology. DSIP was first isolated by Monnier et al. in 1977 (Experientia) from rabbit cerebral venous blood during electrically induced slow-wave sleep. Early animal studies were intriguing, but the human evidence has never followed through in any convincing way.
A 1984 double-blind crossover trial by Schneider-Helmert published in the European Archives of Psychiatry and Neurological Sciences found some improvement in chronic insomnia patients receiving intravenous DSIP, but the sample sizes were tiny and results were inconsistent across subjects. A later review by Graf and Kastin (1986, Peptides) catalogued DSIP's wide range of proposed biological effects, including modulation of stress hormones and sleep architecture, but noted that results were highly variable and often unreplicable. No large, randomized, placebo-controlled trial has ever been completed. The peptide has poor bioavailability when administered peripherally, and whether subcutaneous injection at 150 micrograms produces meaningful central nervous system concentrations in humans is genuinely unclear. The science is thin. That's not an opinion, that's the publication record.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
Credit where it's due: the creator is correct that sourcing quality is a real problem. Unregulated peptide vendors frequently sell mislabeled or contaminated products, and there is no FDA-approved DSIP formulation. That warning is legitimate and worth saying louder.
He's also right that DSIP "has never really taken off," though he attributes this to unknown reasons. There's a more straightforward explanation: the clinical evidence has never been strong enough to justify pharmaceutical development. That's not a mystery, it's a funding and efficacy problem.
Where he goes wrong is presenting a two-week personal experience as a basis for others to experiment with an unregulated injectable peptide. He recommends a starting dose and describes a titration approach, which is the kind of guidance that should come from a licensed clinician with access to your health history, not a TikTok video. The vivid dreaming and rapid sleep onset he describes could also reflect placebo response, which is unusually strong in sleep interventions. Studies consistently show placebo response rates of 30 to 40 percent in insomnia trials (Winkler and Rief, 2015, Sleep Medicine Reviews). His experience is real to him. Whether DSIP caused it is a different question entirely.
What should you actually know?
DSIP is not FDA-approved for any indication. It is not available as a legal prescription medication in the United States, which means any product being sold for human injection exists in a regulatory gray zone at best. Compounded peptides are not equivalent to pharmaceutical-grade compounds, and the absence of standardized testing means you genuinely do not know what you're injecting.
If you have chronic sleep problems, there are evidence-based options that have cleared the bar DSIP has not. Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia, known as CBT-I, has the strongest long-term evidence of any insomnia treatment (Morin et al., 2006, Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine). For people working with a clinician on hormone optimization or TRT, sleep disruption can sometimes reflect underlying hormonal imbalance worth addressing directly. That conversation belongs in a clinical setting, not a comment section.
The creator's enthusiasm is genuine. But "absolutely amazing" after two weeks is not a clinical outcome. It's a feeling, and feelings can be wrong about cause and effect.