REGULATORYRFK Jr.: 14 peptides returning to Category 1 — FDA advisory committee July 2026TRENDINGHexarelin: ↑↑ Surging ��� Trends score 100 as of May 2026UPDATESemaglutide and tirzepatide compounding ended — shortage resolved Feb/May 2025REGULATORYBPC-157, TB-500, thymosin alpha-1, CJC-1295, ipamorelin: expected Category 1 reclassification pendingEVENTpep-talk con ��� First US Peptide Convention · August 2026 · Anaheim CAFDAFDA advisory committee meetings scheduled: late July 2026REGULATORYRFK Jr.: 14 peptides returning to Category 1 — FDA advisory committee July 2026TRENDINGHexarelin: ↑↑ Surging ��� Trends score 100 as of May 2026UPDATESemaglutide and tirzepatide compounding ended — shortage resolved Feb/May 2025REGULATORYBPC-157, TB-500, thymosin alpha-1, CJC-1295, ipamorelin: expected Category 1 reclassification pendingEVENTpep-talk con ��� First US Peptide Convention · August 2026 · Anaheim CAFDAFDA advisory committee meetings scheduled: late July 2026

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Research/Paper
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PubMedPreclinical

Elamipretide (SS-31) promotes recovery by preserving mitochondrial bioenergetics and neural remodeling after spinal cord injury.

Song Zengtao, Ban Zhaoliang, Zhao Haosen, Mei Xifan
Neurochemistry international2026DOI: 10.1016/j.neuint.2026.106171
ElamipretideSS-31

Quality Score

4/10

Citations

0

Subjects

Non-Human

PeptideVault Analysis

Study Design

Preclinical research is the foundation of the drug development pipeline. While these findings require human validation, they establish the mechanistic basis that informs dosing strategies, safety profiles, and target identification for future clinical work.

Our Assessment

Quality Assessment: 4/10 — This study contributes useful data but has methodological limitations that warrant caution. The findings are suggestive rather than definitive, and we'd recommend looking for corroborating evidence before drawing strong conclusions.

Findings in Context

These findings advance our understanding of Elamipretide, SS-31 in meaningful ways.

On the Limitations

Every study has limitations, and being transparent about them is what separates good science from hype. These limitations don't invalidate the findings — they define the boundaries of what we can confidently conclude.

The Takeaway

Bottom line: Early-stage evidence for Elamipretide, SS-31. Interesting mechanistic insights, but we'll need human data before drawing practical conclusions.

Key Findings

The study found that Elamipretide (SS-31) improves functional outcomes after spinal cord injury in mice by preserving mitochondrial bioenergetics and promoting neural remodeling.

Limitations

The study is limited to a preclinical model, which may not fully translate to human clinical settings. Additionally, the mechanisms explored are primarily focused on early stages of injury recovery.

Citation

Song Zengtao, Ban Zhaoliang, Zhao Haosen et al.. (2026). Elamipretide (SS-31) promotes recovery by preserving mitochondrial bioenergetics and neural remodeling after spinal cord injury.. Neurochemistry international. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuint.2026.106171

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This content is derived from peer-reviewed research for educational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using any peptide-based therapy.