Stable Gastric Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 Heals Established Vesicovaginal Fistula and Counteracts Stone Formation in Rats.
Rasic. Domagoj D; Zenko Sever. Anita A; Rasic. Fran F; Strbe. Sanja S; Rasic. Zarko Z; Djuzel. Antonija A; Duplancic. Bozidar B; Boban Blagaic. Alenka A; Skrtic. Anita A; Seiwerth. Sven S; Sikiric. Predrag P; Sever. Marko M
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 stopped urinary leakage and closed the fistula within one week, even when treatment began two weeks after the injury.
- Treated rats showed better tissue regeneration: more epithelial growth, collagen, granulation tissue, and new blood vessels, with less inflammation and necrosis.
- Both very low oral (µg/kg) and injectable (ng/kg) doses prevented bladder stone formation that normally appeared in untreated rats.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this suggests BPC‑157 could be a powerful agent for hard‑to‑heal internal injuries and possibly for preventing urinary stones, but the evidence is only in rats. If experimenting, start with a low oral dose (e.g., 250‑500 µg per day) and monitor for any side effects, keeping in mind that human data are still lacking.
Summary
In rats with a serious bladder‑vagina leak (vesicovaginal fistula) that had been left untreated for two weeks, giving the peptide BPC‑157 (either a tiny 10 µg/kg or even 10 ng/kg dose) once a day, either by injection or in drinking water, stopped the urine leak within a week, healed the tissue, and prevented bladder stones from forming.
Abstract
With the stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 therapy known to heal various both external and internal rat fistulas, we attempt to approach vesicovaginal fistula, continuous urine leaking through vagina, bladder stones, and a possible therapy solution among rats with well-formed 2 week-fistulas (vaginal/vesical 4 mm large defects) started with delayed therapy. Subsequent control fistula course (the subsequent 1, 2, 4, and 6 weeks) since beginning revealed the failed healing, fistula leaking, adhesions, urinary leaking through vagina, failed epithelization, collagenization, granulation tissue and neovascularization, increased inflammation, and necrosis. Thereby, the later intervals revealed the persistent inability to sustain even minimal volume, vesical, and vaginal defects and stone formation at the end of the experiment (fistula-time day 56). BPC 157 therapy (10 µg/kg, 10 ng/kg, intraperitoneally once time daily or perorally in drinking water until sacrifice) was initiated with a considerable delay (at 2 weeks after fistula formation). Already within 1 week therapy, all BPC 157 regimens stopped urinary leaking through vagina, reversed the otherwise resistant poor healing course to the increased epithelization, collagenization, granulation tissue and neovascularization, decreased inflammation, and decreased necrosis. Thereby, at later intervals, all BPC 157 rats exhibited a five times larger volume that can be sustained before leaking as in healthy, vesical, and vaginal defects completely closed and no stone formation. Thus, macro/microscopic and functional recovery, and counteracted stone formation. Concluding, BPC 157 therapy's beneficial effects resulted in healing and no stone formation, with µg- and ng-regimens, either given daily perorally in drinking water or intraperitoneally.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-09-13T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/biomedicines9091206
10
76