Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 and the esophagocutaneous fistula healing therapy.
Cesarec. Vedran V; Becejac. Tomislav T; Misic. Marija M; Djakovic. Zeljko Z; Olujic. Danijela D; Drmic. Domagoj D; Brcic. Luka L; Rokotov. Dinko Stancic DS; Seiwerth. Sven S; Sikiric. Predrag P
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 dramatically accelerated healing of esophagocutaneous fistulas in rats, eliminating leakage and mortality within 4 days.
- Both oral and intraperitoneal administration were effective, even at microgram‑ and nanogram‑level doses.
- The peptide counteracted the negative effects of the NO‑synthase blocker L‑NAME, normalizing eNOS, iNOS, and COX‑2 gene expression and restoring sphincter pressure.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this suggests BPC‑157 may be a potent oral or injectable option for tough gastrointestinal ulcers, fistulas, or related wound healing, potentially at very low doses. However, the evidence is limited to animal models, so human dosing and safety remain unproven and should be approached with caution.
Summary
In a rat study, the peptide BPC‑157 helped heal serious throat‑to‑skin leaks (esophagocutaneous fistulas) even when the body’s nitric‑oxide system was blocked. It worked when given by mouth or injection, at very low doses, and reduced tissue damage and death.
Abstract
Esophagocutaneous fistulas are a failure of the NO-system, due to NO-synthase blockage by the NOS-blocker L-NAME consequently counteracted by l-arginine and gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (l-arginine <BPC 157), precipitating a therapeutic benefit. Previously, there was an established BPC 157-NO-system interaction. BPC 157 GEPPPGKPADDAGLV, MW 1419 (LD1 not achieved), is a safe and stable anti-ulcer peptide, successful in inflammatory bowel disease trials, counteracting esophagitis, sphincter failure, gastrointestinal and skin ulcers, gastrocutaneous or colocutaneous fistulas. We treated rats with established cervical esophagocutaneous fistulas throughout four days (both open skin and esophageal defects, with significant leakage) with BPC 157 (parenterally and perorally) and L-NAME (blocking NO genesis) and l-arginine (NO-substrate) alone or in combination. RT-PCR investigated eNOS, iNOS, COX-2 mRNA levels in the fistulas. We evidenced a closely inter-related process of unhealed skin, esophageal defects, unhealed fistulas (up regulated eNOS, iNOS and COX2 mRNA levels), usually lethal, particularly NO-system related and therapy dependent. Generally, the course of fistula healing was accelerated either to a greater extent (with BPC 157 (in particular, less eNOS gene expression) completely counteracting L-NAME effects, in L-NAME+BPC 157 and L-NAME+l-arginine+BPC 157 groups), or to a lesser extent (with l-arginine). Conversely, the process was aggravated, rapidly and prominently (with L-NAME). In particular, BPC 157 was effective either given per-orally/intraperitoneally, in μg- and ng-regimens. Shortly, defects started to heal, with less fistula leakage and no mortality at day 4. Failure of pyloric and lower esophageal sphincter pressure was restored, with practically no esophagitis.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-12-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.ejphar.2012.11.055
52
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