Doxorubicine-congestive heart failure-increased big endothelin-1 plasma concentration: reversal by amlodipine, losartan, and gastric pentadecapeptide BPC157 in rat and mouse.
Lovric-Bencic. Martina M; Sikiric. Predrag P; Hanzevacki. Jadranka S JS; Seiwerth. Sven S; Rogic. Dunja D; Kusec. Vesna V; Aralica. Gorana G; Konjevoda. Pasko P; Batelja. Lovorka L; Blagaic. Alenka B AB
Key Findings
- BPC‑157 (10 µg/kg in rats, 10 ng/kg in mice) reduced elevated big endothelin‑1 caused by doxorubicin‑induced heart failure.
- The peptide also lowered liver enzymes (AST, ALT, CK, LDH) that were raised by the heart damage.
- Clinical signs of heart failure (low blood pressure, fast heart and breathing rates, fluid buildup) improved with BPC‑157 treatment.
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests BPC‑157 might help protect the heart and reduce stress markers in severe drug‑induced heart injury, but it’s only been shown in rodents. For biohackers, it’s an early hint that BPC‑157 could have cardioprotective effects, yet human dosing, safety, and efficacy remain unknown, so it’s not ready for a DIY protocol.
Summary
In rats and mice with heart damage caused by the chemotherapy drug doxorubicin, giving the peptide BPC‑157 (a tiny stomach‑derived protein) lowered harmful big endothelin‑1 levels and improved liver enzyme markers, similar to the heart drugs losartan and amlodipine.
Abstract
Overall, doxorubicine-congestive heart failure (CHF) (male Wistar rats and NMRI mice; 6 challenges with doxorubicine (2.5 mg/kg, i.p.) throughout 15 days and then a 4-week-rest period) is consistently deteriorating throughout next 14 days, if not reversed or ameliorated by therapy (/kg per day): a stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC157 (GEPPPGKPADDAGLV, MW 1419, promisingly studied for inflammatory bowel disease (Pliva; PL 10, PLD-116, PL 14736)) (10 microg, 10 ng), losartan (0.7 mg), amlodipine (0.07 mg), given intragastrically (i.g.) (once daily, rats) or in drinking water (mice). Assessed were big endothelin-1 (BET-1) and plasma enzyme levels (CK, MBCK, LDH, AST, ALT) before and after 14 days of therapy and clinical status (hypotension, increased heart rate and respiratory rate, and ascites) every 2 days. Controls (distilled water (5 ml/kg, i.g., once daily) or drinking water (2 ml/mouse per day) given throughout 14 days) exhibited additionally increased BET-1 and aggravated clinical status, while enzyme values maintained their initial increase. BPC157 (10 microg/kg) and amlodipine treatment reversed the increased BET-1 (rats, mice), AST, ALT, CK (rats, mice), and LDH (mice) values. BPC157 (10 ng/kg) and losartan opposed further increase of BET-1 (rats, mice). Losartan reduces AST, ALT, CK, and LDH serum values. BPC157 (10 ng/kg) reduces AST and ALT serum values. Clinical status of CHF-rats and -mice is accordingly improved by the BPC157 regimens and amlodipine.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
10.1254/jphs.95.19