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BPC-157

Body Protection Compound-157, PL-14736, Pentadecapeptide BPC 157

Quick Stats
Studies 196
Trials 1
Score 3
2018 pubmed 57 citations

Rat inferior caval vein (ICV) ligature and particular new insights with the stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157.

Vukojević. Jakša J; Siroglavić. Marko M; Kašnik. Katarina K; Kralj. Tamara T; Stanćić. Duje D; Kokot. Antonio A; Kolarić. Darko D; Drmić. Domagoj D; Sever. Anita Zenko AZ; Barišić. Ivan I; Šuran. Jelena J; Bojić. Davor D; Patrlj. Masa Hrelec MH; Sjekavica. Ivica I; Pavlov. Katarina Horvat KH; Vidović. Tinka T; Vlainić. Josipa J; Stupnišek. Mirjana M; Seiwerth. Sven S; Sikirić. Predrag P

Key Findings

  • BPC‑157 prevented thrombosis, platelet loss, and prolonged bleeding after inferior caval vein ligation.
  • The peptide rapidly promoted collateral vessel formation, normalizing blood pressure and heart rate disturbances.
  • It restored normal nitric oxide levels, reduced oxidative stress markers (MDA), and altered expression of vascular‑repair genes (EGR, NOS, SRF, VEGFR, KRAS).

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, BPC‑157 looks promising as a vascular‑protective and healing agent that could help prevent clotting and support circulation after injuries. While the study is in rats, the low microgram‑range dosing suggests a starting point for human experimentation, but exact human doses and safety still need clarification. Users might consider BPC‑157 for serious vascular or wound‑healing protocols, monitoring for any adverse effects.

Summary

In rats where a major vein was tied off, giving the peptide BPC‑157 (tiny doses given early or later) stopped the usual damage – no clots, less bleeding, normal blood pressure, and new side‑branch vessels formed to keep blood flowing. The peptide also fixed the balance of nitric oxide and oxidative stress in the damaged vein and changed several genes that control blood‑vessel repair.

Abstract

Rat inferior caval vein (ICV) ligation (up to the right ovarian vein (ROV)) commonly represents a recapitulation of Virchow: with ligation leading to vessel injury, stasis, thrombosis and hemodynamic changes. We revealed that BPC 157's therapy collectively attenuated or counteracted all these events and the full syndrome. We applied BPC 157 (10 μg, 10 ng/kg) as an early regimen or as a delayed therapy. Assessment includes gross assessment by microcamera; microscopy, venography, bleeding, blood pressure, ECG, thermography, MDA and NO-level in plasma and ICV, and gene expression. Direct vein injury, thrombosis, thrombocytopenia, prolonged bleeding were all counteracted. Also, rapid presentation of collaterals and redistribution of otherwise trapped blood volume (bypassing through the left ovarian vein (LOV) and other veins), with venous hypertension, arterial hypotension and tachycardia counteraction were shown. BPC 157-rats presented raised plasma NO-values, but normal MDA-values; in ICV tissue reverted low NO-values and counteracted increased MDA-levels. Altered expression of EGR, NOS, SRF, VEGFR and KRAS in ICV, ROV and LOV revealed increased or decreased levels, while some genes continuously remained unchanged. As a new insight, BPC 157 application largely attenuated or even completely eliminated all consequences of ICV ligation in rats.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2018

Date

2018-03-03T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.vph.2018.02.010

Citations

57

References

59