Publication | Open Access
Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (PL 14736) improves ligament healing in the rat
36
Citations
20
References
2010
Year
Gastrointestinal PharmacologySurgical TransectionGastroenterologyPeptide TherapeuticsSurgeryOrthopaedic SurgeryMusculoskeletal ResearchSoft Tissue InjuryDrinking WaterMuscle InjuryOsteoarthritisWound CareLigament HealingPharmacologyPentadecapeptide Bpc 157Medial Collateral LigamentPhysiologyPeptide TherapeuticWound HealingPl 14736MedicineTendon Injury
We improved medial collateral ligament (MCL) healing throughout 90 days after surgical transection. We introduced intraperitoneal, per-oral (in drinking water) and topical (thin cream layer) peptide therapy always given alone, without a carrier. Previously, as an effective peptide therapy, stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 (GEPPPGKPADDAGLV, an anti-ulcer peptide effective in inflammatory bowel disease therapy (PL 14736)) particularly improved healing of transected tendon and muscle and wound healing effect including the expression of the early growth response 1 (egr-1) gene. After MCL transection BPC 157 was effective in rats when given once daily intraperitoneally (10 microg or 10 ng/kg) or locally as a thin layer (1.0 microg dissolved in distilled water/g commercial neutral cream) at the site of injury, first application 30 min after surgery and the final application 24 h before sacrifice. Likewise, BPC 157 was effective given per-orally (0.16 microg/ml in the drinking water (12 ml/day/rat)) until sacrifice. Commonly, BPC 157 microg-ng-rats exhibited consistent functional, biomechanical, macroscopic and histological healing improvements. Thus, we suggest BPC 157 improved healing of acute ligament injuries in further ligament therapy.
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