Side-by-side · Research reference
CrystagenvsOxytocin
Side-by-side comparison across mechanism, dosage, evidence, side effects, administration, and stack synergies. Citations on every claim where available.
AAnimal-MechanisticHUMAN-REVIEWED12/40 cited
BFDA-ApprovedHUMAN-REVIEWED11/51 cited
Crystagen
Khavinson Bioregulator · Immune-Thymic
SQ · Protocol variable
Oxytocin
Neuropeptide Hormone · FDA-Approved
~3–20 minPlasma half-life
9 AAPeptide length
Intranasal · IV (obstetric)
01Mechanism of Action
Parameter
Crystagen
Oxytocin
Primary target
B-lymphocytes in splenic tissueСhervyakova 2014
Oxytocin receptors (OXTR) — hypothalamus, amygdala, hippocampus, ventral tegmental area
Pathway
B-cell activation → Immune modulation during agingСhervyakova 2014
OXTR activation → Gq/11-coupled signaling → modulation of GABAergic, dopaminergic, serotonergic pathways → enhanced synaptic plasticity, neurogenesis, emotional regulation
Downstream effect
B-cell activation via apoptosis reduction; no observed increase in splenic cell renewalСhervyakova 2014
Social bonding enhancement, trust behavior, gaze modulation, reciprocal eye contact, anti-inflammatory and antioxidant neuroprotection, reduced amygdala threat responsePaul 2026Prinsen 2026Yuan 2026
Feedback intact?
Unknown — bioregulator mechanism not fully characterized
Yes — endogenous oxytocin-mediated feedback via central and peripheral OXTR pathways
Origin
Synthetic Lys-Glu-Asp-Gly tetrapeptide — Khavinson bioregulator series
Endogenous 9-amino-acid peptide synthesized in hypothalamic paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei, released from posterior pituitaryPaul 2026
Antibody development
—
—
02Dosage Protocols
Parameter
Crystagen
Oxytocin
Standard dose
Not standardized — variable protocols
Russian bioregulator literature does not specify unified human dosing.
—
Evidence basis
Animal / mechanistic
—
Route
Subcutaneous (presumed from bioregulator class)
—
Frequency
Unknown — bioregulator protocols variable
—
Duration
Unknown — chronic administration presumed in animal models
—
Half-life
Not reported
~3–20 min (plasma); CNS effects persist longer
Intranasal (research — autism, social cognition)
—
24–48 IUPrinsen 2026Burmester 2025
Single dose; chronic dosing protocols vary (4–12 weeks documented).
Frequency (research)
—
Once daily to twice daily
IV (obstetric — labor induction)
—
0.5–2 mU/min, titrated every 30–60 min
FDA-approved Pitocin protocol; maximum 20–40 mU/min per institutional guidelines.
Evidence basis (social cognition)
—
Phase 1–2 RCTs in ASD, schizophrenia, social anxiety
Evidence basis (obstetric)
—
FDA-approved · standard-of-care
Timing (intranasal)
—
Morning or pre-social interaction
Acute effects within 30–90 minutes.
04Side Effects & Safety
Parameter
Crystagen
Oxytocin
Published adverse events
None reported in available animal literature
—
Human safety data
Absent — no controlled human trials identified
—
Autoimmune considerations
Theoretical concern with B-cell modulators in predisposed individuals
—
Nasal irritation (intranasal)
—
Mild dryness, congestion
Headache
—
Occasional, transient
Uterine hyperstimulation (IV obstetric)
—
Tachysystole, fetal distress — requires continuous monitoring
Negative interpretation bias (adolescents)
—
Increased negative interpretations of ambiguous social scenarios in female adolescents (with and without eating disorders)Burmester 2025
Hyponatremia (IV)
—
Water intoxication risk with prolonged high-dose IV infusion
Hypersensitivity
—
Rare allergic reactions
Individual variability
—
Salivary oxytocin levels show high subgroup variability in ASD populations; no consistent group-level differences vs controls in some studiesYılmazer 2025
Absolute Contraindications
Crystagen
- ·Active autoimmune disease (theoretical)
Oxytocin
- ·Fetal distress or abnormal fetal heart rate patterns (obstetric)
- ·Cephalopelvic disproportion
- ·Hypersensitivity to oxytocin
Relative Contraindications
Crystagen
- ·Pregnancy / lactation (no data)
- ·Active B-cell malignancies
Oxytocin
- ·Severe cardiovascular disease (obstetric use)
- ·Hypertonic or hyperactive uterus
- ·Prior uterine surgery or cesarean section (relative — use cautiously)
05Administration Protocol
Parameter
Crystagen
Oxytocin
1. Route
Subcutaneous injection — presumed from bioregulator class convention. Specific anatomical sites not standardized.
Administer 24–48 IU (typically 3–6 puffs per nostril) using nasal spray device. Patient should be seated, head tilted slightly forward. Avoid sniffing deeply; allow passive absorption.
2. Reconstitution
Protocol not standardized. If lyophilized, sterile water or bacteriostatic saline typical for peptide bioregulators.
Administer 30–90 minutes before anticipated social interaction or cognitive assessment. Acute effects peak within 30–60 minutes.
3. Timing
Not specified. Bioregulator protocols vary — some practitioners advocate evening dosing, others morning.
Dilute oxytocin 10 units in 1000 mL isotonic saline. Initiate at 0.5–2 mU/min via infusion pump. Titrate every 30–60 minutes based on contraction pattern and fetal heart rate. Continuous electronic fetal monitoring required.
4. Storage
Lyophilized: room temperature, light-protected. Reconstituted: refrigerate, use within days to weeks depending on preservative.
Store at 2–8 °C (refrigerated). Do not freeze. Protect from light. Discard if solution is discolored or contains precipitate.
5. Chronic dosing (research)
—
Chronic administration protocols (4–12 weeks) documented in pediatric ASD populations. Daily or twice-daily intranasal administration. Safety profile in chronic use still under investigation.
06Stack Synergy
Crystagen
+ Vilon
Multi-pathwayVilon (Lys-Glu) activates T-helper cells via apoptosis reduction, while Crystagen activates B-cells. Dual T/B immune modulation in aging models may provide complementary thymic-immune support within the Khavinson bioregulator framework. Both target splenic immune aging through distinct lymphocyte subsets.
- Crystagen
- Dose unknown · SQ
- Vilon
- Dose unknown · SQ
- Frequency
- Protocol variable
- Primary benefit
- Broader thymic-immune coverage (T-cell + B-cell)
Oxytocin
— no documented stacks