Effective therapy of transected quadriceps muscle in rat: Gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157.
Staresinic. Mario M; Petrovic. Igor I; Novinscak. Tomislav T; Jukic. Ivana I; Pevec. Damira D; Suknaic. Slaven S; Kokic. Neven N; Batelja. Lovorka L; Brcic. Luka L; Boban-Blagaic. Alenka A; Zoric. Zdenka Z; Ivanovic. Domagoj D; Ajduk. Marko M; Sebecic. Bozidar B; Patrlj. Leonardo L; Sosa. Tomislav T; Buljat. Gojko G; Anic. Tomislav T; Seiwerth. Sven S; Sikiric. Predrag P
Key Findings
- Daily intraperitoneal BPC‑157 (10 µg, 10 ng, or 10 pg/kg) dramatically improved healing of a fully transected quadriceps muscle in rats.
- Treated rats showed higher load‑to‑failure (stronger muscle), near‑normal walking ability, and restored motor function.
- Histology revealed continuous muscle fibers, increased desmin (regeneration marker), and larger myofibrils matching healthy muscle size.
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests BPC‑157 could be a powerful aid for severe muscle injuries, but it was only tested in rats and given by injection, not orally. Dosage and safety in humans are still unknown, so anyone considering it should treat the data as preliminary and seek professional medical advice before use.
Summary
In a rat study, a peptide called BPC‑157 was given by daily injection after the quadriceps muscle was completely cut. The peptide helped the muscle reconnect, made it stronger, and restored normal walking and leg function over a 72‑day period. The benefits were seen with a wide range of very low doses and no toxicity was reported.
Abstract
We report complete transection of major muscle and the systemic peptide treatment that induces healing of quadriceps muscle promptly and then maintains the healing with functional restoration. Initially, stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (GEPPPGKPADDAGLV, M.W. 1419, PL-10, PLD-116, PL 14736 Pliva, Croatia; in trials for inflammatory bowel disease; wound treatment; no toxicity reported; effective alone without carrier) also superiorly accelerates the healing of transected Achilles tendon. Regularly, quadriceps muscle completely transected transversely 1.0 cm proximal to patella presents a definitive defect that cannot be compensated in rat. BPC 157 (10 microg, 10 ng, 10 pg/kg) is given intraperitoneally, once daily; the first application 30 min posttransection, the final 24 h before sacrifice. It consistently improves muscle healing throughout the whole 72-day period. Improved are: (i) biomechanic (load of failure increased); (ii) function (walking recovery and extensor postural thrust/motor function index returned toward normal healthy values); (iii) microscopy/immunochemistry [i.e., mostly muscle fibers connect muscle segments; absent gap; significant desmin positivity for ongoing regeneration of muscle; larger myofibril diameters on both sides, distal and proximal (normal healthy rat-values reached)]; (iv) macroscopic presentation (stumps connected; subsequently, atrophy markedly attenuated; finally, presentation close to normal noninjured muscle, no postsurgery leg contracture). Thus, posttransection healing-consistently improved-may suggest this peptide therapeutic application in muscle disorders.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-05-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/jor.20089
70
27