Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 shortens duration of tetracaine- and oxybuprocaine-induced corneal anesthesia in rats.
Mirković. Ivan I; Kralj. Tamara T; Lozić. Marin M; Stambolija. Vasilije V; Kovačević. Josip J; Vrdoljak. Luka L; Zlatar. Mirna M; Milanović. Kristina K; Drmić. Domagoj D; Predović. Jurica J; Masnec. Sanja S; Jurjević. Matija M; Bušić. Mladen M; Seiwerth. Sven S; Kokot. Antonio A; Sikirić. Predrag P
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 (0.4 µg/eye) fully counteracted tetracaine‑ and oxybuprocaine‑induced corneal anesthesia in rats.
- The reversal worked whether nitric‑oxide synthase was inhibited (L‑NAME) or supplied with its substrate (L‑arginine).
- L‑arginine alone shortened anesthesia duration early on, while L‑NAME prolonged numbness and increased corneal damage.
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests BPC‑157 could act as an antidote to topical eye anesthetics, but it’s only been tested in rats and as an eye‑drop formulation. For biohackers, the finding is interesting but not ready for human use or self‑experimentation without further safety and dosing data.
Summary
In rats, a tiny eye‑drop dose of the peptide BPC‑157 quickly reversed the numbness caused by common eye anesthetics and helped the cornea heal, even when nitric‑oxide pathways were blocked or boosted.
Abstract
We focused on the relationship of 0.5% tetracaine- and 0.4% oxybuprocaine-induced corneal anesthesia in rats, and pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (0.4 µg/eye), along with nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor N(gamma)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) (0.1 mg/eye) and/or NOS substrate L-arginine (2 mg/eye), applied in the form of eye drops. We assessed corneal sensitivity recovery (Cochet-Bonnet esthesiometer), corneal lesion elimination (staining with 10% fluorescein) and decrease in tear volume (Schirmer test). BPC 157 administration had a full counteracting effect. Recovery also occurred in the presence of NOS blockade and NOS substrate application. L-arginine eventually shortened duration of corneal insensitivity and exerted corneal lesion counteraction (and counteraction of tetracaine-induced decrease of tear volume) only in earlier but not in later period. L-NAME application led to longer duration of corneal insensitivity, increase in corneal lesions and decrease in tear volume. When L-NAME and L-arginine were applied together, they antagonized each other's effect. These distinctions may indicate particular NOS involvement (corneal insensitivity <i>vs</i>. corneal lesion along with tear production), distinctively affected by the administration of NO agents. However, additional BPC 157 co-administration would re-establish counteraction over topical ophthalmic anesthetic-induced effect, be it in its early or late course. We suggest BPC 157 as an antidote to topical ophthalmic anesthetics.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-09-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.20471/acc.2020.59.03.02
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