Fistulas Healing. Stable Gastric Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 Therapy.

Stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 colovesical esophagoduodenal fistulas healing rectovaginal therapy

Journal

Current pharmaceutical design
ISSN: 1873-4286
Titre abrégé: Curr Pharm Des
Pays: United Arab Emirates
ID NLM: 9602487

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2020
Historique:
received: 03 03 2020
accepted: 16 04 2020
pubmed: 25 4 2020
medline: 7 1 2021
entrez: 25 4 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

This review is focused on the healing of fistulas and stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157. Assuming that the healing of the various wounds is essential also for the gastrointestinal fistulas healing, the healing effect on fistulas in rats, consistently noted with the stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157, may raise several interesting possibilities. BPC 157 is originally an anti-ulcer agent, native to and stable in human gastric juice (for more than 24 h). Likely, it is a novel mediator of Robert's cytoprotection maintaining gastrointestinal mucosal integrity. Namely, it is effective in the whole gastrointestinal tract, and heals various wounds (i.e., skin, muscle, tendon, ligament, bone; ulcers in the entire gastrointestinal tract; corneal ulcer); LD1 is not achieved. It is used in ulcerative colitis clinical trials, and now in multiple sclerosis, and addressed in several reviews. Therefore, it is not surprising that BPC 157 has documented consistent healing of the various gastrointestinal fistulas, external (esophagocutaneous, gastrocutaneous, duodenocutaneous, colocutaneous) and internal (colovesical, rectovaginal). Taking fistulas as a pathological connection, this rescue is verified with the beneficial effects in rats with the various gastrointestinal anastomoses, esophagogastric, jejunoileal, colo-colonic, ileoileal, esophagojejunal, esophagoduodenal, and gastrojejunal. This beneficial effect occurs equally when the gastrointestinal anastomoses are impaired with the application of NSAIDs, cysteamine, large bowel resection, as well as concomitant esophageal, gastric, and duodenal lesions and/or ulcerative colitis presentation, short bowel syndrome progression, liver and brain disturbances presentation. Particular aspects of the BPC 157 healing of the fistulas are especially emphasized.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32329684
pii: CPD-EPUB-106105
doi: 10.2174/1381612826666200424180139
doi:

Substances chimiques

Anti-Ulcer Agents 0
Peptide Fragments 0
Proteins 0
BPC 157 8ED8NXK95P

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

2991-3000

Informations de copyright

Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.net.

Auteurs

Predrag Sikiric (P)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Domagoj Drmic (D)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Marko Sever (M)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Robert Klicek (R)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Alenka B Blagaic (AB)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Ante Tvrdeic (A)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Tamara Kralj (T)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Katarina K Kovac (KK)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Jaksa Vukojevic (J)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Marko Siroglavic (M)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Slaven Gojkovic (S)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Ivan Krezic (I)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Katarina H Pavlov (KH)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Domagoj Rasic (D)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Ivan Mirkovic (I)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Antonio Kokot (A)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Anita Skrtic (A)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

Sven Seiwerth (S)

Departments of Pharmacology and Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Salata 11, POB 916, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.

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Classifications MeSH