BPC 157 and blood vessels.
Seiwerth. Sven S; Brcic. Luka L; Vuletic. Lovorka Batelja LB; Kolenc. Danijela D; Aralica. Gorana G; Misic. Marija M; Zenko. Anita A; Drmic. Domagoj D; Rucman. Rudolf R; Sikiric. Predrag P
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 is described as the most potent angiomodulatory peptide, enhancing vascular repair after injury.
- It influences multiple pathways (NO, VEGF, FAK) to improve vasodilation, reduce thrombosis, and limit edema formation.
- Beyond healing, the peptide also interacts with tumor‑related blood‑vessel processes, highlighting its broad vascular activity.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that BPC‑157 could be used to speed up recovery from vascular injuries, improve circulation, and possibly reduce swelling and clot risk. Because the review does not give dosing details, start with low, commonly reported doses from animal studies and watch for any side effects. More human safety data are still needed.
Summary
BPC‑157 appears to be a very powerful agent for fixing damaged blood vessels. It helps the lining of vessels heal, promotes the growth of new vessels, eases swelling, and can lower the chance of clots by working through several natural pathways like nitric oxide and VEGF.
Abstract
This review focuses on the described effects of BPC 157 on blood vessels after different types of damage, and elucidate by investigating different aspects of vascular response to injury (endothelium damage, clotting, thrombosis, vasoconstriction, vasodilatation, vasculoneogenesis and edema formation) especially in connection to the healing processes. In this respect, BPC 157 was concluded to be the most potent angiomodulatory agent, acting through different vasoactive pathways and systems (e.g. NO, VEGF, FAK) and leading to optimization of the vascular response followed, as it has to be expected, by optimization of the healing process. Formation of new blood vessels involves two main, partly overlapping mechanisms, angiogenesis and vasculogenesis. The additional mechanism of arteriogenesis is involved in the formation of collaterals. In conjunction with blood vessel function, we at least have to consider leakage of fluid/proteins/plasma, resulting in edema/exudate formation as well as thrombogenesis. Blood vessels are also strongly involved in tumor biology. In this aspect, we have neoangiogenesis resulting in pathological vascularization, vascular invasion resulting in release of metastatic cells and the phenomenon of homing resulting in formation of secondary tumors--metastases.
Study Information
pubmed
2014
2014-01-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.2174/13816128113199990421
50