P21 (P021)

P21 (P021) scored 4.4 / 10 (⚠️ Caution) on the BioHarmony scale as a Substance → Peptide → Neuropeptide.

P21 (P021) is a CNTF-derived peptidomimetic that crosses the blood-brain barrier and, in mice, raises BDNF, lifts hippocampal neurogenesis, and lowers tau pathology in Alzheimer's models. The catch is total. There are zero human trials, the single independent in-vivo replication failed to reproduce the BDNF benefit, and almost all the positive work comes from the inventor, who co-founded the company commercializing it.

Overall4.4 / 10⚠️ CautionSignificant downsides to weigh
Your Score🔒Take the quiz →
Cognition / Focus 2.5 Memory 2.5 Neuroprotection 2.5 Neuroplasticity 2.5
📅 Scored May 23, 2026·BioHarmony v1.0·Rev 2

What is P21 (P021)?

P21, also written P021, is a lab-designed peptide built from a small piece of ciliary neurotrophic factor, a natural growth factor for nerve cells. Researchers mapped the most active fragment of that protein, then bolted on a bulky adamantane group so the peptide could cross the blood-brain barrier and resist breakdown.

The result is a brain-penetrant peptidomimetic, sequence Ac-DGGL(A)G-NH2, that in mice raises brain-derived neurotrophic factor, boosts the birth of new neurons in the hippocampus, and lowers tau pathology in Alzheimer's models, per Li 2010 and Kazim 2014. That is genuinely interesting science.

First, clear up the name. P21 is easy to confuse with the cell-cycle protein p21, also called CDKN1A or WAF1, which is a tumor suppressor and a completely different molecule. They share nothing but a short label. In every nootropic and peptide context, P21 means P021, the CNTF peptidomimetic. The compound was named P21 in its 2010 founding paper, per Li 2010, and renamed P021 in all the work that followed, so the two names point to the same thing.

The design logic behind P21 is worth understanding, because it is the most impressive thing about the molecule. Full proteins like CNTF and BDNF do remarkable things in a dish, yet they fail as drugs: they are too large to cross the blood-brain barrier, they break down fast, and they carry serious side effects. The Iqbal lab worked around all three problems at once. They identified the active fragment of CNTF, shrank it to a four-amino-acid peptide, then attached an adamantane cage to make it fatty enough to slip into the brain and stiff enough to resist the enzymes that chew up peptides, per Kazim 2016. The payoff in rodents was real: the molecule worked when given by mouth, an unusual feat for a peptide and a genuine pharmacologic strength, per Khatoon 2015. That oral activity, plus confirmed brain penetration, is why the compound keeps drawing attention despite never reaching a human.

Here is the catch, and it is the whole story. The entire case for P21 is preclinical. There are zero human trials of any kind, and crucially, the one time an independent lab tried to reproduce its signature BDNF mechanism in live animals, it failed, per Mottolese 2024. On top of that, nearly every positive paper shares the same inventor as senior author, and he co-founded the company that licenses the peptide, per Kazim 2017. So the score reflects an honest read. There is clean, broad mouse data, no human proof, a failed independent replication, and a commercially conflicted evidence base. The rodent results give you a reason to watch the field while it matures, rather than a reason to inject the peptide today.

The single most important fact about P21 is the one vendors leave out. When an outside lab tested its signature BDNF mechanism in live mice, the peptide rescued cells in a dish but did not raise BDNF or fix neuroanatomy in the animals. The first independent in-vivo check of the core claim did not reproduce it.Mottolese 2024, J Neurodev Disord

Terminology

A few terms decide how you read this report, because the gap between "it works in a mouse" and "it works in a person" is exactly where P21 lives, and because the name itself causes confusion.

  • P21 vs P021: The same compound. P21 is the original 2010 name, per Li 2010; P021 is the modern designation used in every later paper. Grey-market vendors use both.
  • CNTF: Ciliary neurotrophic factor, the natural nerve-growth protein P21 was epitope-mapped from.
  • Peptidomimetic: A small synthetic molecule designed to copy the active part of a larger protein, here a fragment of CNTF made drug-like with an adamantane group.
  • BDNF: Brain-derived neurotrophic factor, the growth signal P21 raises in rodents and the target of the failed independent replication.
  • GSK-3beta: Glycogen synthase kinase-3beta, the main enzyme that hyperphosphorylates tau. Raising BDNF lowers it, which is how P21 reduces tau pathology in mice.
  • Tau and amyloid-beta: The two hallmark Alzheimer's proteins. P21 strongly lowered tau and modestly lowered soluble amyloid-beta in mouse models, per Kazim 2014.
  • Preclinical: Animal and cell-culture work that comes before any human testing. P21's entire record is preclinical.
  • Cell-cycle p21 (CDKN1A/WAF1): A different molecule entirely, a tumor suppressor, not what this report is about.

How do you take P21 (P021)?

Dosing & Protocols

Dosing information is summarized from published research and community reports. This is not a prescribing guide. Consult a healthcare provider before starting any protocol.

View 3 routes and 3 protocols

Routes & Forms

RouteFormClinical RangeCommunity Range
Subcutaneous injectionLyophilized powder reconstituted with bacteriostatic water (research-chemical grade, purity and identity unverified) No approved clinical dose 100 to 500 mcg per day, cycled about 4 to 6 weeks
Intranasal sprayReconstituted solution marketed for nose-to-brain delivery No approved clinical dose 500 mcg to 1 mg per day; some vendors push 2 to 4 mg for an acute effect
Oral (rodent only)In-diet chronic administration in animal studies No human oral dosing standard exists Not established in people

Protocols

Conservative injectable (extrapolated) Anecdotal

Dose
100 mcg
Frequency
Once daily, subcutaneous
Duration
4 to 6 weeks, then off

Lowest common grey-market starting point. Extrapolated from rodent dosing, not validated in any human study.

Standard injectable (extrapolated) Anecdotal

Dose
200 to 300 mcg
Frequency
Once daily, subcutaneous
Duration
4 to 6 weeks, then off

Mid-range vendor protocol. No human dose-finding data supports it.

Intranasal (extrapolated) Anecdotal

Dose
500 mcg to 1 mg
Frequency
Once daily
Duration
4 to 6 weeks

Marketed for nose-to-brain delivery. Bioavailability in humans is unknown.

How the score is calculated
Upside (weighted)
+1.30
Downside (harm ×1.4)
1.94
EV = 1.301.94 = -0.64 Score = ((-0.64 + 7) / 12) × 10 = 4.4 / 10

What are the benefits of P21 (P021)?

Upside contribution: 1.30

DimensionWeightScoreVisualWeighted
Efficacy25%2.5
0.625
Breadth15%2.8
0.420
Evidence25%1.5
0.375
Speed10%2.5
0.250
Durability10%2.5
0.250
Bioindividuality15%2.5
0.375
Total2.295

Upside Rationale

The upside is concentrated in mouse mechanism, not in anything proven in people. P21's genuine asset is a clean, broad, brain-penetrant neurogenic profile across rodent models, raising BDNF, lifting hippocampal neurogenesis, and lowering tau pathology. Its weakness is that none of this has ever been demonstrated in a human, and the one independent in-vivo test of the core mechanism failed. Breadth and bioindividuality score modestly because the preclinical footprint is wide but entirely animal. Evidence is the dimension that drags the total down hardest.

Efficacy (2.5/5.0): Efficacy is low because the effects are large and consistent in rodents but completely undemonstrated in humans. In normal adult mice, peripherally administered P021 enhanced learning and both short-term and spatial reference memory while inducing dentate-gyrus neurogenesis, per Li 2010, and in Alzheimer's-model mice it rescued cognition while lowering tau, per Kazim 2014. Aged rats showed reversed memory decline and restored synaptic markers after chronic oral dosing, per Bolognin 2014. Those are real animal effect sizes, but they are not human cognitive outcomes. Mouse neurogenesis and memory rescue predict essentially nothing about a healthy human's cognition, and the Alzheimer's translational record, where dozens of neurotrophic agents worked in mice and failed in people, is the base rate here. A confirmed rodent effect without any human outcome cannot score as effective for the marketed human use, which is why the number stays low despite how clean the animal data looks.

Breadth of Benefits (2.8/5.0): Breadth is moderate because the preclinical footprint is genuinely wide, wider than most grey-market peptides, but it is entirely in animals. Across studies, P021 touched Alzheimer's pathology, normal aging, Down-syndrome models, traumatic brain injury, and even retinal degeneration, with neurogenesis and synaptic rescue as the common thread, per Baazaoui 2017 and Chohan 2015. In Down-syndrome model mice, early treatment rescued developmental and memory deficits while raising BDNF and lowering GSK-3beta, per Kazim 2017, which shows the same core mechanism reaching across very different disease contexts. The boundary is that breadth of mechanism is not breadth of proof. None of these systems has a controlled human endpoint, so the wide reach is a reason the molecule is interesting, not a reason to expect any of these benefits in people. A peptide that does many things in mice and nothing measured in humans has broad potential and zero demonstrated human range.

Evidence Quality (1.5/5.0): Evidence quality is the weakest dimension and the reason the score sits in caution. There are zero human trials of any kind, so start there. Worse, the single independent in-vivo test of P021's signature BDNF mechanism failed: a University of Bologna group found it rescued cells in culture but did not raise BDNF or improve neuroanatomy in live Cdkl5-knockout mice, per Mottolese 2024. On top of that, nearly every positive paper has the inventor as senior author, and he co-founded the company licensing the peptide and holds the patents, an explicit conflict disclosed in the work, per Kazim 2017. Preclinical-only, inventor-dominated, with a failed independent replication of the core claim, this is floor-level evidence and the dimension I refuse to raise on mouse data alone.

Speed of Onset (2.5/5.0): Speed is unknown in humans and slow in the animal record. In rodents, the benefits appeared only after chronic dosing over weeks to months, including in-diet treatment lasting up to a year, per Kazim 2014. The mechanism itself argues against a quick result: building new hippocampal neurons and shifting tau biology are slow biological processes, not same-day effects, per Baazaoui 2017. No acute effect has been demonstrated in any species on a validated endpoint, so vendor claims of a fast acute response are unsupported. With no human pharmacology at all, any timeline for a person is guesswork, which is why this scores middling rather than as a strength.

Durability (2.5/5.0): Durability is unknown in humans and conditional in rodents. The animal benefits were shown under continuous chronic dosing, and some prevention paradigms started treatment before pathology and maintained it for the whole study, per Bolognin 2014. Whether any effect persists after stopping, and over what human timescale, has never been measured. Neurogenesis-driven changes could in theory outlast dosing, but there is no evidence either way, so this is scored from absence of data, not from a demonstrated lasting effect.

Bioindividuality Upside (2.5/5.0): Human inter-individual response is entirely unknown because no human has been studied. In rodents, aged animals with more baseline deficit tended to show larger relative responses, per Bolognin 2014, which hints that people with more cognitive room to recover might respond more. The disease-model work points the same way, with the clearest rescue showing up in animals that started with the most pathology, per Kazim 2014. That is a reasonable mechanistic guess, not data. Without any human variability picture, this lands at the middle, since there are plausible modifiers but no way to predict who would respond, and a healthy person with an intact memory system might be the least likely to notice anything at all.

What are the risks & downsides of P21 (P021)?

Downside contribution: 1.94 (safety risks weighted extra)

DimensionWeightScoreVisualWeighted
Safety30%2.8
0.840
Side effects15%2.4
0.360
Cost5%3.0
0.150
Effort5%2.8
0.140
Opportunity5%3.2
0.160
Dependency15%1.8
0.270
Reversibility25%2.2
0.550
Total2.470
Harm subtotal × 1.42.828
Opportunity subtotal × 1.00.450
Combined downside3.278
Baseline offset (constant)−1.340
Effective downside penalty1.938

Downside Rationale

The downside is dominated by the absence of human safety data and a steep opportunity cost rather than a known acute danger. There is no documented intrinsic catastrophic effect in the rodent record, so the worst-case here is uncertainty rather than a confirmed severe signal. The heavier weights come from cost, effort, and opportunity, because this is a grey-market injectable that diverts attention and money away from evidence-backed cognitive interventions. Dependency is low, and reversibility is presumed but unproven in people. Taken together, the downside picture is less about a frightening side-effect profile and more about spending real resources and accepting real unknowns for a benefit that has never been shown in a human.

Safety Risk (2.8/5.0): Safety risk is moderate, driven entirely by missing human data rather than a known catastrophic signal. There is no human safety data of any kind, meaning no Phase I tolerability study, no human pharmacokinetics, and no pharmacovigilance. Every reassuring statement, such as "no adverse effects" or "no immune reaction," is a rodent observation, often from the inventor's own papers, per Khatoon 2015. The theoretical concerns are real but unquantified in people. Chronically raising BDNF and neurogenic signaling has plausible links to aberrant neurogenesis and seizure-threshold changes, and any pro-trophic agent warrants caution in anyone with active or prior cancer, since the same growth pathways that help neurons can in theory feed unwanted proliferation. None of this is a documented life-threatening effect, so it does not score as catastrophic, but the total absence of a human safety baseline is exactly why this dimension scores poorly. With a compound this untested, the prudent default is that the safety profile is simply unknown, and unknown is not the same as safe.

Side Effect Profile (2.4/5.0): Side effects are unknown in humans. Rodent studies report few, but those reports are inventor-sourced and do not transfer to people, per Kazim 2016. The practical near-term concern is the grey-market injectable route, which adds injection-site reactions and infection risk independent of the molecule itself. Because there is no human side-effect record, this scores on uncertainty rather than a documented profile, and any new symptom should be treated as a reason to stop.

Financial Cost (3.0/5.0): Cost is moderate and recurring. Research-chemical P021 is not cheap per vial, and meaningful use means chronic dosing over weeks plus reconstitution supplies and, for injectable use, sterile technique. The relevant framing is that this is ongoing spend on a compound with no human evidence, so the money buys a research-grade experiment on yourself, not a validated outcome.

Time/Effort Burden (2.8/5.0): Effort is meaningful. The common routes are daily subcutaneous injection or intranasal dosing, with reconstitution, cold-chain storage, sterile handling, and cycling. Rodent efficacy required chronic administration over weeks to months, so any honest attempt to mirror the animal work means sustained daily logistics, not a quick course. That is a real burden compared with an oral supplement, and it underestimates nothing to call it demanding.

Opportunity Cost (3.2/5.0): Opportunity cost is the heaviest downside and higher than for most peptides in this space. Money, effort, and risk spent on an untested research chemical could go to cognitive interventions with actual human data behind them, such as Cerebrolysin with its human randomized trials or Semax with its decades of human use. They could also go to sleep, training, and the basics that move cognition with far more certainty. Choosing P021 means choosing the option with the weakest human evidence in its class, which is the definition of high opportunity cost.

Dependency/Withdrawal (1.8/5.0): Dependency risk is low. There is no addiction or withdrawal signal in the rodent record, and the mechanism is trophic rather than rewarding, so benefits would simply fade when dosing stops rather than produce a withdrawal syndrome. This is one of the few dimensions where the absence of data points toward a genuinely low concern rather than just uncertainty.

Reversibility (2.2/5.0): Reversibility is presumed but unproven in people. The peptide clears the body relatively quickly, so acute exposure is not long-lasting, but neurogenesis and growth-factor modulation are the kind of structural changes whose reversibility cannot be assumed without human data, per Baazaoui 2017. Nothing catastrophic or clearly irreversible is on record, but the honest position is that we do not know whether chronic use leaves any lasting change, so this scores below the midpoint on uncertainty.

Is P21 (P021) worth it?

P21 (P021) sits in caution because it pairs the cleanest, broadest rodent neurogenesis-and-tau dataset of any grey-market neurogenic peptide with a completely empty human file and a failed independent replication of its core mechanism. The mouse science is real and worth following: brain-penetrant, orally active, lowering tau, lifting BDNF and neurogenesis across many models. But there are zero human trials, the one independent in-vivo test of the BDNF effect failed, per Mottolese 2024, and nearly all the positive work comes from the inventor, who co-founded the company licensing it, per Kazim 2017. That combination makes the molecule worth following in the literature while it matures, rather than worth self-administering today. The two biggest real-world frictions are the total absence of a human safety baseline and unregulated grey-market sourcing. It is worth saying plainly that the mouse data being genuinely good is what makes this peptide tempting, and it is also why the no-human-evidence line deserves to be loud rather than buried in a footnote.

P21 was orally active and crossed the blood-brain barrier in rodents, a genuine pharmacologic strength that most peptides lack, and it lowered tau pathology while lifting hippocampal neurogenesis in Alzheimer's-model mice. That clean preclinical profile is exactly why the missing human data and the failed replication matter so much.Kazim 2014, Neurobiol Dis

Best for: People who find the neurogenic mechanism genuinely interesting and want to track it as the literature develops. Anyone who understands that the entire case is preclinical, that the one independent in-vivo replication failed, and that the evidence base is inventor-dominated. Readers comparing it against better-evidenced cognitive options like Cerebrolysin and Semax to see why human data matters. Researchers and clinicians following the Alzheimer's preclinical pipeline.

Avoid if: You want a cognitive intervention with human evidence behind it, because P021 has none. You have active or prior cancer, since chronically raising trophic and pro-proliferative signaling is a theoretical concern with no human safety data. You have a seizure disorder, given the theoretical seizure-threshold concern from neurogenesis modulation. You are pregnant or breastfeeding, with zero safety data. You cannot verify the purity, identity, and sterility of grey-market material, because research-chemical contamination may exceed the intrinsic pharmacological risk of an already untested compound.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is P21 (P021), and how does it work?

P21, also written P021, is a small peptidomimetic engineered from the most active fragment of ciliary neurotrophic factor, with an adamantane group added so it crosses the blood-brain barrier. In rodents it raises brain-derived neurotrophic factor and inhibits leukemia inhibitory factor signaling, which lowers the tau kinase GSK-3beta and supports hippocampal neurogenesis, per Kazim 2016. It is a neurogenic peptide, not the cell-cycle protein of the same short name.

Is P21 the cell-cycle protein p21?

No, and this confusion is common. The cell-cycle protein p21, also called CDKN1A or WAF1, is a tumor-suppressor that halts cell division and is an entirely different molecule. The P21 discussed here is P021, a CNTF-derived neurogenic peptide with the sequence Ac-DGGL(A)G-NH2, named P21 in its founding paper, per Li 2010, and renamed P021 afterward. In nootropic and peptide contexts, P21 always means the CNTF peptidomimetic.

Does P21 (P021) work in humans?

There are zero human trials of P21 (P021). ClinicalTrials.gov returns no registered study, and every efficacy and safety claim comes from rodents and cell culture, per Kazim 2014. The mouse and rat data on neurogenesis, tau, and memory are genuinely clean, but the historical record of neurotrophic agents that worked in mice and failed in people is long. Nothing supports a human cognitive or Alzheimer's benefit yet.

Did the independent replication of P021 fail?

The single independent in-vivo test of P021's signature mechanism failed. A University of Bologna group found that P021 rescued neurons in cell culture but, in live Cdkl5-knockout mice, did not raise BDNF, did not improve neuroanatomy, and gave only limited behavioral benefit, per Mottolese 2024. This is the first independent in-vivo check of the core BDNF claim, and it did not reproduce it, which is the most important under-reported fact about this peptide.

Who developed P021, and is there a conflict of interest?

Almost all P021 efficacy papers come from one lab, with the inventor as senior author, per Kazim 2017. That inventor also co-founded and serves as chief scientific officer of Phanes Biotech, the company that licenses P021, and holds the patents, disclosed in the papers themselves and in Mottolese 2024. This is not fraud, but a concentrated, commercially conflicted evidence base caps confidence until independent groups replicate the core findings.

How does P21 (P021) compare to Cerebrolysin and Semax?

Cerebrolysin and Semax both have real human data that P021 lacks. Cerebrolysin has human randomized trials, mixed and modest but real, and Semax has decades of Russian clinical use. P021 has zero human trials and one failed independent in-vivo replication, so it must score below both. Among grey-market neurogenic peptides, Dihexa is its closest analogue, sharing the same fatal flaw of no human evidence.

How is P21 (P021) dosed?

There is no validated human dose. Grey-market protocols extrapolate from rodent studies and vendor suggestions, typically 100 to 500 mcg per day by subcutaneous injection or 500 mcg to 1 mg per day intranasally, cycled over several weeks, per the rodent dosing in Kazim 2014. None of these are approved or clinically established. Rodent efficacy needed chronic dosing over weeks to months, so any acute claim is unsupported.

Where do people get P021, and is it safe to source?

P021 is sold only as a research chemical labeled for laboratory use, not approved by any regulator, per Khatoon 2015 for the preclinical-only context. Grey-market vendors offer injectable and nasal forms with the usual purity, sterility, identity, and mislabeling risks, and injectable use adds infection risk. Because there is no human safety baseline, sourcing hazards stack on top of an already untested compound.

Who is P21 (P021) for?

Right now P021 is something to watch in the literature rather than something to inject. The case for human use rests entirely on mouse data, with zero human trials, a failed independent in-vivo replication, and an inventor-dominated evidence base, per Mottolese 2024. If you find the neurogenesis mechanism interesting, the sensible move is to follow the field as it develops rather than self-administer a research chemical that has no validated dose and no human safety data behind it.

What could change P21 (P021)'s score?

BioHarmony scores are living assessments. New research, regulatory changes, or personal context can shift the score up or down. These are the most likely scenarios that would change this intervention's rating.

The fastest path up is human data, and the fastest path down is a second independent failure or any human safety signal. Because the current score rests on an empty human file, even modest real evidence in either direction would move it more than usual. A registered Phase I that completed with acceptable human safety and pharmacokinetics would lift both Safety and Evidence, since it would replace pure speculation about tolerability with at least a first read on how people handle the compound. A Phase II showing a real, independent human cognitive or biomarker effect would lift Efficacy, Evidence, and Durability together and move P021 toward worth-trying, especially if the work came from a group with no commercial tie to the peptide. The most valuable single result would be an independent lab reproducing the BDNF and neurogenesis findings in animals, because that would directly address the failed replication that currently caps confidence, per Mottolese 2024. On the other side, a second independent in-vivo null beyond the CDKL5 result, or a documented human safety problem, would push the score lower, and a confirmed catastrophic effect in any human use would drop it into skip territory. Until one of those things happens, the honest position is to treat the rodent data as a promising lead in someone else's pipeline, not as a green light to self-experiment.

ScenarioDimension shiftsNew Score
A registered Phase I completes with acceptable human safety and pharmacokineticsSafety 2.8 to 2.3, Evidence 1.5 to 2.04.7 / 10 ⚖️ Neutral
A Phase II shows a real, independent human cognitive or biomarker effectEfficacy 2.5 to 3.5, Evidence 2.0 to 3.0, Durability 2.5 to 3.05.0 / 10 ⚖️ Neutral
A second independent in-vivo null beyond CDKL5 emergesEvidence 1.5 to 1.2, Efficacy 2.5 to 2.04.2 / 10 ⚠️ Caution
A documented human safety signal appears in any useSafety 2.8 to 3.6, Evidence 1.5 to 1.34.0 / 10 ⚠️ Caution
Independent testing keeps finding mislabeled or contaminated productSafety 2.8 to 3.3, Bioindividuality 2.5 to 2.04.1 / 10 ⚠️ Caution

Key Evidence Sources

What does the evidence say about P21 (P021)?

Evidence on this intervention is summarized across three complementary streams: contemporary clinical research, pre-RCT-era pharmacology and observational use, and the traditional medical systems that documented it first. Convergence across streams signals higher confidence; divergence is surfaced honestly.

Modern Clinical Research

Confidence: Low

The modern evidence for P21 (P021) is entirely preclinical and there are zero human trials. In rodents, the peptide crosses the blood-brain barrier, raises brain-derived neurotrophic factor, lifts hippocampal neurogenesis, and lowers tau pathology in Alzheimer's models, per Li 2010 and Kazim 2014. Two things cap confidence sharply. First, the single independent in-vivo test of its signature BDNF mechanism failed to reproduce the effect in live mice, per Mottolese 2024. Second, nearly every positive paper has the inventor as senior author, and he co-founded the company licensing the peptide, an explicit conflict of interest disclosed in the work itself, per Kazim 2017. The honest read is clean mouse science, no human proof, and a failed independent replication of the core mechanism.

Citations: Li 2010, Kazim 2014, Mottolese 2024, Kazim 2017

What to Track If You Try This

These are the data points that matter most while running a 30-day Experiment with this intervention.

How to read this section
Pre
Test or score before starting the protocol. Anchors a baseline.
During
Track while running the protocol so you can see if anything is changing.
Post
Re-test after a full cycle to confirm the change held.
Up
The marker should rise. For most positive outcomes, that is a good sign.
Down
The marker should fall. For most positive outcomes, that is a good sign.
Stable
The marker should hold steady. Big swings in either direction are a yellow flag.
Watch
Direction depends on dose, timing, and your baseline. Pay close attention to the trend.
N/A
No expected direction. The entry is there to anchor a baseline reading.
Primary
The Pulse dimension most likely to shift. Track this first.
Secondary
Also relevant, but a smaller or less consistent shift. Track if Primary is unclear.

Pulse Dimensions to Watch

  • Drive During | Expected Watch | Primary
  • Calm During | Expected Watch | Secondary
  • Energy During | Expected Watch | Tertiary

Subjective Signals (Daily Voice Card)

  • Mental clarity, focus, and recall on a simple daily 1 to 5 self-rating Scale 1-5 | During | Expected Watch
  • Mood and motivation Scale 1-5 | During | Expected Watch

Red Flags: Stop and Consult

  • Any new or worsening seizure, aura, or unusual neurological symptom: stop immediately, since growth-factor and neurogenesis modulation has a theoretical seizure-threshold concern.
  • Active or prior cancer: do not use, since chronically raising trophic and pro-proliferative signaling is a theoretical concern with no human safety data.
  • Injection-site redness, swelling, warmth, or fever: stop and seek care, since grey-market injectables carry sterility and infection risk.
  • Any unexpected reaction at all: there is no human safety baseline, so treat anything new as a reason to stop and reassess.

Other interventions for Cognition & Focus

See all ratings →
📊 How BioHarmony scoring works

BioHarmony translates a weighted expected-value calculation into a reader-facing 0–10 score. Tier bands: Skip 0–3.6, Caution 3.7–4.7, Neutral 4.8–5.7, Worth Trying 5.8–6.9, Strong Recommend 7.0–7.9, Top-tier 8.0+.

Harm-type downsides (safety risk, side effects, reversibility, dependency) carry a 1.4× precautionary multiplier. Harm weighs more than benefit. Opportunity-type downsides (financial cost, time/effort, opportunity cost) are subtracted at face value.

Use case subratings are independent assessments of how well the intervention addresses specific health goals. They are not components of the overall score. Each subrating reflects the scorer's judgment based on use-case-specific evidence, safety, and effect sizes.

Every dimension is evaluated on a 1–5 scale, and the baseline (1) is subtracted before weighting. A perfect intervention with zero downsides contributes zero penalty rather than a residual floor, so top-tier scores are actually reachable.

EV = Upside − Downside
EV = 1.295 − 1.938 = -0.643
Formula v0.5 maps EV = 0 to score 5.0. Above neutral, 1 EV point equals 1 score point. Below neutral, 1 EV point equals about 0.71 score points, so EV = −7 reaches 0.0 while EV = +5 reaches 10.0. Both sides use the full 5-point half-scale.
Score = 5 + (-0.643 / 7) × 5 = 4.5 / 10

See the full BioHarmony methodology →

This report is educational and informational. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new supplement, device, protocol, or intervention, particularly if you take prescription medications, have a chronic health condition, are pregnant or nursing, or are under 18.