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Int J Surg ; 11(10): 1118-22, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24080114

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Adhesion formation is a major problem following abdominal surgery as it creates a considerable economic burden in addition to an increased risk for complications. In the present study, an effort was made to reduce post-operative adhesion formation by creating an artificial atmosphere within and around the abdominal cavity during an open surgical procedure. METHODS: 82 Wistar male rats (Clr:WI) (200 gr, 7 weeks) were randomized into two groups. The abdominal cavity of the control group was exposed to the normal atmosphere of the operating-theatre during surgery (21% O2, 21 °C, 40-47% relative humidity (RH)), while the abdominal cavity of the study group was exposed to an artificial atmosphere during surgery (3-6% O2, >75% CO2, 95-100% RH, 37 °C). Adhesion induction consisted of a laparotomy along linea-alba, four lesions in the anterior abdominal-wall, blood from the tail vein dripped inside the abdominal cavity and exposure to the atmosphere around the wound by use of self-retaining retractors. In addition, a liquid-sample for quantitative bacteriologic cultivation and bacterial load (CFU/ml) calculation was taken just before closure. After 3 weeks the abdominal cavity was scored for the extent, tenacity and severity of adhesions before the rats were euthanized. The two-sample-Wilcoxon-rank-sum test was used in the analysis. RESULTS: Highly significant differences in postoperative total adhesion score, extent-, severity- and tenacity-score were found (P < 0.01). No differences were found between the two groups regarding mean bacterial load (P > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The rats exposed to the warmed and humidified artificial atmosphere consisting of more than 75% carbon dioxide and 3-4% oxygen during surgery had more severe and more post-operative adhesions compared to the rats that were exposed to the ambient air during surgery.


Subject(s)
Abdominal Cavity/surgery , Tissue Adhesions/physiopathology , Animals , Carbon Dioxide , Disease Models, Animal , Humidity , Male , Random Allocation , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Statistics, Nonparametric , Tissue Adhesions/epidemiology
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