Stable Gastric Pentadecapeptide BPC 157-Possible Novel Therapy of Glaucoma and Other Ocular Conditions.
Sikiric. Predrag P; Kokot. Antonio A; Kralj. Tamara T; Zlatar. Mirna M; Masnec. Sanja S; Lazic. Ratimir R; Loncaric. Kristina K; Oroz. Katarina K; Sablic. Marko M; Boljesic. Marta M; Antunovic. Marko M; Sikiric. Suncana S; Strbe. Sanja S; Stambolija. Vasilije V; Beketic Oreskovic. Lidija L; Kavelj. Ivana I; Novosel. Luka L; Zubcic. Slavica S; Krezic. Ivan I; Skrtic. Anita A; Jurjevic. Ivana I; Boban Blagaic. Alenka A; Seiwerth. Sven S; Staresinic. Mario M
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 instantly normalized intra‑ocular pressure in rats with experimentally induced glaucoma.
- Treated rats showed preserved retinal ganglion cells, normal optic nerve appearance, and healed corneal injuries.
- The peptide also reduced systemic hypertension (brain, portal, and caval veins) linked to the eye disease.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study suggests BPC‑157 could one day be useful for glaucoma or other eye injuries, but it is still early‑stage animal research. No human protocols, dosages, or safety data exist, so it isn’t ready for self‑experimentation yet.
Summary
In a rat study, the peptide BPC‑157 quickly lowered eye pressure in a glaucoma model and helped keep the retina, optic nerve, and cornea healthy. It also reduced related blood‑pressure problems in the brain and other vessels. The results are promising but only in animals, with no human dosing or safety information yet.
Abstract
Recently, stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 therapy by activation of collateral pathways counteracted various occlusion/occlusion-like syndromes, vascular, and multiorgan failure, and blood pressure disturbances in rats with permanent major vessel occlusion and similar procedures disabling endothelium function. Thereby, we revealed BPC 157 cytoprotective therapy with strong vascular rescuing capabilities in glaucoma therapy. With these capabilities, BPC 157 therapy can recover glaucomatous rats, normalize intraocular pressure, maintain retinal integrity, recover pupil function, recover retinal ischemia, and corneal injuries (i.e., maintained transparency after complete corneal abrasion, corneal ulceration, and counteracted dry eye after lacrimal gland removal or corneal insensitivity). The most important point is that in glaucomatous rats (three of four episcleral veins cauterized) with high intraocular pressure, all BPC 157 regimens immediately normalized intraocular pressure. BPC 157-treated rats exhibited normal pupil diameter, microscopically well-preserved ganglion cells and optic nerve presentation, normal fundus presentation, nor- mal retinal and choroidal blood vessel presentation, and normal optic nerve presentation. The one episcleral vein rapidly upgraded to accomplish all functions in glaucomatous rats may correspond with occlusion/occlusion-like syndromes of the activated rescuing collateral pathway (azygos vein direct blood flow delivery). Normalized intraocular pressure in glaucomatous rats corresponded to the counteracted intra-cranial (superior sagittal sinus), portal, and caval hypertension, and aortal hypotension in occlusion/occlusion-like syndromes, were all attenuated/eliminated by BPC 157 therapy. Furthermore, given in other eye disturbances (i.e., retinal ischemia), BPC 157 instantly breaks a noxious chain of events, both at an early stage and an already advanced stage. Thus, we further advocate BPC 157 as a therapeutic agent in ocular disease.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-07-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ph16071052
6
215