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BPC-157

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

Quick Stats
Studies 196
Trials 1
Score 2
2017 pubmed 1 citations

Class side effects: decreased pressure in the lower oesophageal and the pyloric sphincters after the administration of dopamine antagonists, neuroleptics, anti-emetics, L-NAME, pentadecapeptide BPC 157 and L-arginine.

Belosic Halle. Zeljka Z; Vlainic. Josipa J; Drmic. Domagoj D; Strinic. Dean D; Luetic. Kresimir K; Sucic. Mario M; Medvidovic-Grubisic. Maria M; Pavelic Turudic. Tatjana T; Petrovic. Igor I; Seiwerth. Sven S; Sikiric. Predrag P

Key Findings

  • Dopamine antagonists, L‑NAME, and L‑arginine all decrease lower esophageal and pyloric sphincter pressure in rats.
  • BPC‑157 administered at 10 µg/kg (or even 10 ng/kg) reverses this pressure drop in a dose‑dependent manner.
  • BPC‑157 also normalizes elevated nitric‑oxide levels and oxidative‑stress markers (TBARS) caused by haloperidol.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers using dopamine‑blocking drugs or concerned about gut barrier health, BPC‑157 may help protect the stomach and esophageal sphincters from drug‑induced weakening. The study suggests very low doses can be effective in rats, but human dosing is still uncertain, so start with typical low microgram sub‑cutaneous regimens and monitor GI comfort. It also hints that BPC‑157 could counteract oxidative stress linked to these medications.

Summary

In rats, drugs that block dopamine (like many antipsychotics) and chemicals that mess with nitric oxide lower the pressure of the lower esophageal and stomach exit valves, which could lead to reflux or ulcer problems. Giving the peptide BPC‑157 at very low doses (micro‑ to nanogram levels) restored normal valve pressure and reduced the drug‑induced rise in nitric oxide and oxidative stress. The effect was dose‑dependent and worked even when other compounds (L‑arginine or L‑NAME) were interfering.

Abstract

The ulcerogenic potential of dopamine antagonists and L-NAME in rats provides unresolved issues of anti-emetic neuroleptic application in both patients and experimental studies. Therefore, in a 1-week study, we examined the pressures within the lower oesophageal and the pyloric sphincters in rats [assessed manometrically (cm H<sub>2</sub>O)] after dopamine neuroleptics/prokinetics, L-NAME, L-arginine and stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 were administered alone and/or in combination. Medication (/kg) was given once daily intraperitoneally throughout the 7&#xa0;days, with the last dose at 24&#xa0;h before pressure assessment. Given as individual agents to healthy rats, all dopamine antagonists (central [haloperidol (6.25&#xa0;mg, 16&#xa0;mg, 25&#xa0;mg), fluphenazine (5&#xa0;mg), levomepromazine (50&#xa0;mg), chlorpromazine (10&#xa0;mg), quetiapine (10&#xa0;mg), olanzapine (5&#xa0;mg), clozapine (100&#xa0;mg), sulpiride (160&#xa0;mg), metoclopramide (25&#xa0;mg)) and peripheral(domperidone (10&#xa0;mg)], L-NAME (5&#xa0;mg) and L-arginine (100&#xa0;mg) decreased the pressure within both sphincters. As a common effect, this decreased pressure was rescued, dose-dependently, by BPC 157 (10&#xa0;&#xb5;g, 10&#xa0;ng) (also note that L-arginine and L-NAME given together antagonized each other's responses). With haloperidol, L-NAME worsened both the lower oesophageal and the pyloric sphincter pressure, while L-arginine ameliorated lower oesophageal sphincter but not pyloric sphincter pressure, and antagonized L-NAME effect. With domperidone, L-arginine originally had no effect, while L-NAME worsened pyloric sphincter pressure. This effect was opposed by L-arginine. All these effects were further reversed towards a stronger beneficial effect, close to normal pressure values, by the addition of BPC 157. In addition, NO level was determined in plasma, sphincters and brain tissue. Thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) were also assessed. Haloperidol increased NO levels (in both sphincters, the plasma and brain), consistently producing increased TBARS levels in the plasma, sphincters and brain tissues. These effects were all counteracted by BPC 157 administration. In conclusion, we revealed that BPC 157 counteracts the anti-emetic neuroleptic class side effect of decreased pressure in sphincters and the dopamine/NO-system/BPC 157 relationship.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2017

Date

2017-05-17T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s10787-017-0358-8

Citations

1