BPC 157: The counteraction of succinylcholine, hyperkalemia, and arrhythmias.
Stambolija. Vasilije V; Stambolija. Tamara Perleta TP; Holjevac. Jadranka Katancic JK; Murselovic. Tamara T; Radonic. Jelena J; Duzel. Viktor V; Duplancic. Bozidar B; Uzun. Sandra S; Zivanovic-Posilovic. Gordana G; Kolenc. Danijela D; Drmic. Domagoj D; Romic. Zeljko Z; Seiwerth. Sven S; Sikiric. Predrag P
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 completely blocked the local paralysis caused by succinylcholine in rat leg muscles.
- The peptide eliminated hyperkalemia (high blood potassium) and arrhythmias that normally followed succinylcholine administration.
- It reduced muscle swelling, loss of muscle fibers, and post‑drug pain, working when given before, after, or orally in water.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this suggests BPC‑157 might have protective effects against severe potassium spikes and muscle‑blocking agents, but the data are limited to rats and the dosing used is very low. It is not yet a proven or safe emergency protocol for humans, so more research is needed before applying it in real‑world situations.
Summary
In a rat study, the peptide BPC‑157 was able to stop the muscle‑paralyzing effects of the drug succinylcholine and also prevented dangerous high potassium levels and irregular heartbeats. The peptide worked whether it was given before, right after, or even in the drinking water before the succinylcholine was injected, and it reduced muscle swelling and damage.
Abstract
After the demonstration of its life-saving effect in severe hyperkalemia and the recovery of skeletal muscle after injury, pentadecapeptide BPC 157 has been shown to attenuate the local paralytic effect induced by succinylcholine, in addition to systemic muscle disability (and consequent muscle damage). Hyperkalemia, arrhythmias and a rise in serum enzyme values, were counteracted in rats. Assessments were made at 3 and 30min and 1, 3, 5, and 7 days after succinylcholine administration (1.0mg/kg into the right anterior tibial muscle). BPC 157 (10µg/kg, 10ng/kg) (given intraperitoneally 30min before or immediately after succinylcholine or per-orally in drinking water through 24h until succinylcholine administration) mitigated both local and systemic disturbances. BPC 157 completely eliminated hyperkalemia and arrhythmias, markedly attenuated or erradicated behavioral agitation, muscle twitches, motionless resting and completely eliminated post-succinylcholine hyperalgesia. BPC 157 immediately eliminated leg contractures and counteracted both edema and the decrease in muscle fibers in the diaphragm and injected/non-injected anterior tibial muscles. Therefore, the depolarizing neuromuscular blocker effects of succinylcholine were successfully antagonized.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-04-06T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.ejphar.2016.04.004
32
40