Withdrawn: Stable Gastric Pentadecapeptide BPC 157 as a Therapy of Severe Electrolyte Disturbances in Rats
This entry corresponds to a withdrawn article originally submitted to the journal Current Neuropharmacology, investigating the use of the stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 as a potential therapy for severe electrolyte disturbances in rats. The article was retracted at the authors' own request, and the publisher (Bentham Science) provided no details regarding the specific findings, data, or conclusions of the original study. Because the full content of the paper is unavailable — replaced entirely by a withdrawal notice — no experimental methods, results, or conclusions can be evaluated or attributed to the study. The withdrawal notice also includes standard publisher boilerplate regarding submission conditions and plagiarism policy, but does not disclose the reason for withdrawal. As a result, this record cannot be used to draw any conclusions about BPC 157's effects on electrolyte disturbances. Researchers and educators should treat this citation as non-existent in the evidence base, as the underlying data and claims are no longer accessible or endorsed by the authors or publisher.
Why this grade: The article was withdrawn at the authors' request with no findings, data, or methodology available for evaluation; no evidentiary weight can be assigned.
The article has been withdrawn at the author's request from the website of the journal Current Neuropharmacology.Bentham Science apologizes to the readers of the journal for any inconvenience this may have caused.The Bentham Editorial Policy on Article Withdrawal can be found at https://benthamscience.com/editorial-policies-main.php Bentham science disclaimer It is a condition of publication that manuscripts submitted to this journal have not been published and will not be simultaneously submitted or published elsewhere. Furthermore, any data, illustration, structure or table that has been published elsewhere must be reported, and copyright permission for reproduction must be obtained. Plagiarism is strictly forbidden, and by submitting the article for publication the authors agree that the publishers have the legal right to take appropriate action against the authors, if plagiarism or fabricated information is discovered. By submitting a manuscript, the authors agree that the copyright of their article is transferred to the publishers if and when the article is accepted for publication.
Educational summary of published research — not medical advice. Full text is shown only where licensing permits.