Stable Gastric Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 and Intestinal Anastomoses Therapy in Rats-A Review.
Bajramagic. Salem S; Sever. Marko M; Rasic. Fran F; Staresinic. Mario M; Skrtic. Anita A; Beketic Oreskovic. Lidija L; Oreskovic. Ivana I; Strbe. Sanja S; Loga Zec. Svjetlana S; Hrabar. Josip J; Coric. Luka L; Prenc. Matea M; Blagaic. Vladimir V; Brcic. Klara K; Boban Blagaic. Alenka A; Seiwerth. Sven S; Sikiric. Predrag P
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 accelerated healing of various gastrointestinal anastomoses (esophagogastric, colocolonic, jejunoileal, ileoileal).
- The peptide reduced or eliminated different fistulas (e.g., gastro‑cutaneous, colovesical) in rats.
- It counteracted associated disturbances like esophagitis, colitis, short‑bowel syndrome, vessel occlusion, and nitric‑oxide/prostaglandin dysfunction.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that BPC‑157 shows promise for gut repair and fistula closure in animal models, but there’s no human data, dosing guidelines, or safety profile yet. Until clinical studies confirm these effects, using BPC‑157 for gastrointestinal healing remains speculative and should be approached with caution.
Summary
In rats, the peptide BPC‑157 helped heal many types of gut connections (like stitches after surgery) and even closed abnormal openings (fistulas). It also seemed to fix related problems such as inflammation, poor blood flow, and hormone system issues. However, the work is all in animals and doesn’t give clear dosing or safety info for people.
Abstract
By introducing the healing of many distinctive anastomoses by BPC 157 therapy, this review practically deals with the concept of the resection and reconnection of the hollow parts of the gastrointestinal tract as one of the cornerstones of visceral surgery. In principle, the healing of quite distinctive anastomoses itself speaks for applied BPC 157 therapy, in particular, as a way in which the therapy of anastomoses can be successfully approached and carried out. Some of the anastomoses implicated were esophagogastric, colocolonic, jejunoileal, and ileoileal anastomoses, along with concomitant disturbances, such as esophagitis, sphincter dysfunction, failed intestinal adaptation, colitis, short bowel syndrome, major vessel occlusion, NO-system, and prostaglandins-system dysfunction, which were accordingly counteracted as well, and, finally, findings concerning other anastomoses healing (i.e., nerve and vessel). Moreover, the healing of fistulas, both external and internal, colocutaneous, gastrocutaneous, esophagocutaneous, duodenocutaneous, vesicovaginal, colovesical, and rectovaginal in rats, perceived as anastomoses made between two different tissues which are normally not connected, may also be indicative. This may be a particular reconnection of the parts of the gastrointestinal tract to re-establish adequate integrity depending on the tissue involved, given that both various intestinal anastomoses and various fistulas (intestinal and skin were accordingly healed simultaneously as the fistulas disappeared) were all healed.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-08-17T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ph17081081
4
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