Quick Comparison

ThymalinVilon
Half-LifeVariable (complex peptide mixture; estimated several hours)0.5-1 hours
Typical DosageStandard: 10 mg intramuscular once daily for 5-10 days. Cycled once or twice yearly for immune support. Some protocols use 10-day courses at the start of cold/flu season.Oral/sublingual: 10-20 mg once daily. Injectable: 0.5-5 mg subcutaneous once daily. Typical course: 10-15 days, repeated every 3-6 months.
AdministrationIntramuscular injectionOral, sublingual, or subcutaneous injection
Research Papers3 papers4 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Thymalin

Thymalin is a complex of short peptides extracted from bovine thymus glands, representing the biologically active fraction of thymic hormones. The thymus gland is the primary organ of T-cell maturation — bone marrow-derived T-cell precursors migrate to the thymus where they undergo positive and negative selection, emerging as mature, immunocompetent CD4+ helper and CD8+ cytotoxic T cells. The thymus produces a suite of peptide hormones that guide this maturation process, and Thymalin contains a mixture of these bioactive peptides.

The peptide complex acts at multiple points in the immune system. It promotes the differentiation of pre-T cells into mature T-cell subsets, restoring the CD4/CD8 ratio toward normal values (typically 1.5-2.5:1 in healthy individuals). It enhances natural killer (NK) cell cytotoxic activity, which is critical for immune surveillance against virus-infected and neoplastic cells. It modulates cytokine production — generally promoting a balanced Th1/Th2 response rather than driving either extreme — and enhances macrophage phagocytic capacity.

The relevance to aging is direct: the thymus undergoes progressive involution (shrinkage) beginning at puberty, and by age 60-70, most thymic tissue has been replaced by fat, with minimal residual T-cell educating capacity. This thymic involution is a major driver of immunosenescence — the age-related decline in immune function that increases susceptibility to infections, cancers, and autoimmune conditions while reducing vaccine responsiveness. Thymalin aims to pharmacologically replace the thymic peptide signals lost through involution, partially restoring the immune system's ability to produce new, functional T cells. Research from the Khavinson group has reported that Thymalin treatment in elderly patients was associated with reduced mortality and improved immune markers over long-term follow-up, though these studies require independent replication in Western clinical settings.

Vilon

Vilon (Lys-Glu) is a synthetic dipeptide bioregulator developed as part of the Khavinson peptide bioregulator program, designed to mimic the immune-regulatory effects of thymic peptides in the shortest possible amino acid sequence. As a dipeptide, it is one of the smallest molecules proposed to have specific gene-regulatory activity — which is both its appeal (simplicity, stability, oral bioavailability) and the source of scientific skepticism (whether a two-amino-acid molecule can have specific transcriptional effects).

Vilon is proposed to regulate thymic function and T-cell immunity through the peptide bioregulator mechanism: penetrating cell membranes, entering the nucleus, and interacting with specific DNA sequences in immune-related gene promoters. The reported effects include enhanced T-cell differentiation from thymic precursors, improved balance between CD4+ helper and CD8+ cytotoxic T cell populations, and modulation of cytokine production toward a more balanced Th1/Th2 immune profile.

Preclinical and clinical studies from the Khavinson group have reported that Vilon treatment enhances immune surveillance (the ability of the immune system to detect and eliminate abnormal cells), improves vaccine responsiveness in elderly subjects, and partially reverses age-related immunosenescence markers. In combination with Epithalon (another Khavinson bioregulator targeting telomerase and the pineal gland), Vilon was reported to reduce mortality in a long-term follow-up study of elderly subjects in St. Petersburg. The proposed mechanism for immune enhancement involves restoration of thymic peptide signaling that declines with age-related thymic involution, essentially providing a minimal molecular signal that tells immune progenitor cells to differentiate and mature. As with all Khavinson bioregulators, independent validation through Western clinical trial standards is still needed.

Risks & Safety

Thymalin

Common

pain and reactions at the injection site, mild fatigue during the first course.

Serious

limited Western clinical data, most evidence comes from Russian institutions.

Rare

severe allergic reaction, may trigger autoimmune activity in predisposed individuals.

Vilon

Common

mild injection site reactions, temporary fatigue.

Serious

very limited Western safety data, may overstimulate immune system in autoimmune conditions, no long-term data on repeated use.

Rare

allergic reactions.

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