An endogeous defensive concept, renewed cytoprotection/adaptive cytoprotection: intra(per)-oral/intragastric strong alcohol in rat. Involvement of pentadecapeptide BPC 157 and nitric oxide system.
Becejac. T T; Cesarec. V V; Drmic. D D; Hirsl. D D; Madzarac. G G; Djakovic. Z Z; Bunjevac. I I; A Zenko Sever. A A; Sepac. A A; Batelja Vuletic. L L; Stancic Rokotov. D D; Seiwerth. S S; Sikiric. P P
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 (0.01 mg/kg or even 0.00001 mg/kg) completely cured severe alcohol‑induced stomach ulcers in rats.
- The peptide also normalized lowered lower‑esophageal and pyloric sphincter pressures caused by alcohol.
- Manipulating the nitric‑oxide system (with L‑arginine or L‑NAME) altered the injury severity, confirming NO involvement, but only BPC‑157 fully restored tissue health.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, BPC‑157 appears to be a potent gut‑protective agent that could help repair alcohol‑related gastric damage. The study suggests low‑dose, post‑injury administration is effective in rats, but human dosing, safety, and delivery routes (e.g., oral vs. injection) remain untested. Until clinical data emerge, consider BPC‑157 only under professional guidance and not as a routine alcohol‑binge remedy.
Summary
In rats, the peptide BPC‑157 quickly healed stomach ulcers caused by strong alcohol and helped restore the pressure of the esophageal and pyloric sphincters. The protective effect was seen even when the alcohol was applied to the tongue and swallowed, and it involved the body's nitric‑oxide system. While the study shows promising gut‑healing power, it was done in animals with an injection after the damage, so direct human protocols are still uncertain.
Abstract
With intra(per)-oral strong alcohol application at the tongue, swallowed, we renewed Robert's stomach cytoprotection/adaptive cytoprotection concept. We assessed strong (96%) alcohol-induced severe or minute lesions in stomach, tongue-esophagus-stomach-duodenum lesions, and sphincter pressure (lower esophageal and pyloric) upon administration intragastrically (at 1 h) or intra(per)-orally at the tongue, and swallowed (at 1, 5, 15, 30 min; and 1, 2, 24 h). The assessment also included combined administrations (intra(per)-oral at the tongue, swallowed and intragastric (at 1 h)). Immediate post-alcohol intraperitoneal medication (mg/kg) was the stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (0.01, 0.00001; a Robert's cytoprotection mediator; with a therapeutic effect), NOS-blocker L-NAME (5), and NOS-substrate L-arginine (100 mg), (NO-system involvement). After intragastric strong alcohol administration, severe stomach ulcerations appeared along with widespread tongue, esophagus, duodenum redness, and minimal sphincter pressures. By contrast, a particular syndrome (immediate overlapping of cytoprotection/adaptive cytoprotection) (minute gastric lesion or largely attenuated hemorrhagic ulceration, tongue affected, minute esophageal and duodenal lesions, but with intact mucosa; sphincters pressures lowered) appeared after intra(per)-oral administration (1 min-24 h) as well as after combined administrations (intra(per)-oral + intragastric). BPC 157 apparently cured all alcohol-lesions, amplified the spontaneously initiated strong mucosal beneficial effect, rescued sphincter pressures; NO-agents (L-arginine (slight mucosal amelioration) and L-NAME (aggravation)) showed NO-system involvement, but no comparable effects on dropped sphincters pressures. In conclusion, minute gastric lesions (with oral application of strong alcohol at the tongue and swallowed, without, or with intragastric application of strong alcohol) renew and revise Robert's stomach cytoprotection/adaptive cytoprotection concept. The tongue becomes a new initial target, resulting in spontaneous reversal of strong alcohol-stomach lesions. BPC 157 therapy functions also within the redirected complexity of Robert's stomach cytoprotection/adaptive cytoprotection concept.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-09-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.26402/jpp.2018.3.11
17
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