BPC-157 Accelerates Achilles Tendon Healing in Rats
Staresinic M, Sebecic B, Patrlj L, et al.
Summary
BPC-157 improved functional recovery and biomechanical properties of transected Achilles tendons in rats, with enhanced angiogenesis and reduced inflammation.
Clinical Significance
Supports the growing preclinical evidence for BPC-157's tissue repair properties in musculoskeletal applications.
Study Design
- Model: Rat Achilles tendon transection
- Groups: BPC-157 (10μg/kg and 10ng/kg) vs saline control
- Route: Intraperitoneal injection, once daily
- Endpoints: Functional recovery, biomechanical testing, histology
Key Findings
Functional Recovery
BPC-157-treated animals showed significantly improved walking patterns at days 7, 14, and 21 post-transection compared to controls.
Biomechanical Results
BPC-157 treatment led to significantly improved biomechanical properties compared to controls:
- Load to failure: Significantly increased
- Tendon cross-sectional area: Increased compared to baseline
- Collagen organization: Improved alignment and structure
Mechanism Findings
- VEGF expression increased at injury site
- Neovascularization enhanced in healing tendon
- Inflammatory markers reduced at injury site
- Both doses (10μg/kg and 10ng/kg) were effective
Limitations
- Animal study — no human data yet
- Short follow-up period
- Single injury model tested
Clinical Relevance
These results are consistent with BPC-157's angiogenic and anti-inflammatory effects observed in other tissue types. Human clinical trials are needed before clinical application.
Sources
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