Modulation of early functional recovery of Achilles tendon to bone unit after transection by BPC 157 and methylprednisolone.
Krivic. A A; Majerovic. M M; Jelic. I I; Seiwerth. S S; Sikiric. P P
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 (10 µg/kg, i.p.) increased early functional recovery of the Achilles tendon‑bone unit in rats.
- The peptide lowered inflammatory markers (myeloperoxidase activity and inflammatory cell influx).
- BPC‑157 promoted angiogenesis (higher vascular index), whereas methylprednisolone reduced new vessel formation.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in tendon repair, BPC‑157 shows promise as a dual anti‑inflammatory and pro‑angiogenic agent that may speed early healing. While the data are from rats, the daily dosing schedule and observed benefits suggest it could be explored in human protocols for acute tendon injuries, pending safety and clinical validation.
Summary
In rats with a cut Achilles tendon attached to bone, a single daily dose of the peptide BPC‑157 (10 µg/kg) given right after surgery helped the tendon heal faster. It reduced inflammation, boosted new blood‑vessel growth, and led to better movement scores compared to a steroid drug, which only cut inflammation but slowed blood‑vessel formation and didn’t improve function.
Abstract
In the presented study we compared the effect of stable peptide BPC 157 and methylprednisolone on early functional recovery after Achilles tendon to bone transection in a rat model before collagen healing started. Surgical transection of the right Achilles tendon to bone area was performed in seventy two Wistar Albino male rats. Healing Achilles tendon edges were harvested at days 1-4 following the transection. Using Achilles functional index (AFI), myeloperoxidase activity, histological inflammatory cell influx and vascular index early functional recovery was evaluated. Agents (stable peptide BPC 157 10 microg methylprednisolone 5 mg, normal saline 5 ml) were given alone (/kg b.w., intraperitoneally, once daily, first 30 min after surgery, last 24 h before analysis). Control group received normal saline 5 ml/kg. BPC 157 improved functional recovery (AFI values increased at all time points, p <0.05) by anti-inflammatory (decreased myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity and histological inflammatory cell influx, p <0.05) and increased new blood vessel formation (increased vascular index, p <0.05). Methyprednisolone decreased MPO activity and histological inflammatory cell influx, (p <0.05) but also decreased new blood vessel formation and did not affect early functional recovery. Stable peptide BPC 157 with combined anti-inflammatory action and induction of early new blood vessel formation facilitates early functional recovery in Achilles tendon to bone healing.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-05-05T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s00011-007-7056-8
38
24