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Adhesion formation after laparoscopic surgery: what do we know about the role of the peritoneal environment?

In spite of the approaches that have been proposed to reduce postoperative peritoneal adhesions, they remain a major clinical problem because of the associated intestinal obstruction, chronic pelvic pain, female infertility and difficulties at the time of reoperation. The pathogenesis of the process...

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Autores principales: Molinas, C.R., Binda, M.M., Manavella, G.D., Koninckx, P.R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Universa Press 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4090584/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25013705
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author Molinas, C.R.
Binda, M.M.
Manavella, G.D.
Koninckx, P.R.
author_facet Molinas, C.R.
Binda, M.M.
Manavella, G.D.
Koninckx, P.R.
author_sort Molinas, C.R.
collection PubMed
description In spite of the approaches that have been proposed to reduce postoperative peritoneal adhesions, they remain a major clinical problem because of the associated intestinal obstruction, chronic pelvic pain, female infertility and difficulties at the time of reoperation. The pathogenesis of the process have been focused almost exclusively on the local events induced by the surgical trauma, and the strategies for adhesion prevention thus focused on barriers to separate surgically denuded areas. The important role of the peritoneal cavity environment only recently became apparent and is not yet incorporated in adhesion reducing strategies. Recent data demonstrate that, in the presence of a direct surgical trauma, the entire peritoneal environment is quantitatively the most important factor in adhesion formation and hence adhesion prevention after both open and laparoscopic surgery. Indeed mesothelial hypoxia (CO2 pneumoperitoneum) or hyperoxia (open surgery), desiccation and surgical manipulation have been identified as factors cumulatively enhancing adhesions. The clinical implication is especially relevant for laparoscopic surgery because the pneumoperitoneum, being a closed environment, can be easily conditioned. Although human studies are lacking, animal data indicate that peritoneal adhesions can be reduced by over 80% with a good surgical technique, with adequate pneumoperitoneum conditioning as adding 3-4% of oxygen to the CO2 pneumoperitoneum, prevention of desiccation and slight cooling. Adhesion prevention barriers remain additionally effective, although quantitatively less important. The relevance of all these strategies for adhesion prevention still have to be confirmed in humans, but since it seems that the peritoneal environment is quantitatively much more important than the surgical trauma, adhesion prevention research and strategies should be directed more to conditioning the peritoneal cavity than to the use of agents.
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spelling pubmed-40905842014-07-10 Adhesion formation after laparoscopic surgery: what do we know about the role of the peritoneal environment? Molinas, C.R. Binda, M.M. Manavella, G.D. Koninckx, P.R. Facts Views Vis Obgyn Review In spite of the approaches that have been proposed to reduce postoperative peritoneal adhesions, they remain a major clinical problem because of the associated intestinal obstruction, chronic pelvic pain, female infertility and difficulties at the time of reoperation. The pathogenesis of the process have been focused almost exclusively on the local events induced by the surgical trauma, and the strategies for adhesion prevention thus focused on barriers to separate surgically denuded areas. The important role of the peritoneal cavity environment only recently became apparent and is not yet incorporated in adhesion reducing strategies. Recent data demonstrate that, in the presence of a direct surgical trauma, the entire peritoneal environment is quantitatively the most important factor in adhesion formation and hence adhesion prevention after both open and laparoscopic surgery. Indeed mesothelial hypoxia (CO2 pneumoperitoneum) or hyperoxia (open surgery), desiccation and surgical manipulation have been identified as factors cumulatively enhancing adhesions. The clinical implication is especially relevant for laparoscopic surgery because the pneumoperitoneum, being a closed environment, can be easily conditioned. Although human studies are lacking, animal data indicate that peritoneal adhesions can be reduced by over 80% with a good surgical technique, with adequate pneumoperitoneum conditioning as adding 3-4% of oxygen to the CO2 pneumoperitoneum, prevention of desiccation and slight cooling. Adhesion prevention barriers remain additionally effective, although quantitatively less important. The relevance of all these strategies for adhesion prevention still have to be confirmed in humans, but since it seems that the peritoneal environment is quantitatively much more important than the surgical trauma, adhesion prevention research and strategies should be directed more to conditioning the peritoneal cavity than to the use of agents. Universa Press 2010 /pmc/articles/PMC4090584/ /pubmed/25013705 Text en Copyright: © 2010 Facts, Views & Vision http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Molinas, C.R.
Binda, M.M.
Manavella, G.D.
Koninckx, P.R.
Adhesion formation after laparoscopic surgery: what do we know about the role of the peritoneal environment?
title Adhesion formation after laparoscopic surgery: what do we know about the role of the peritoneal environment?
title_full Adhesion formation after laparoscopic surgery: what do we know about the role of the peritoneal environment?
title_fullStr Adhesion formation after laparoscopic surgery: what do we know about the role of the peritoneal environment?
title_full_unstemmed Adhesion formation after laparoscopic surgery: what do we know about the role of the peritoneal environment?
title_short Adhesion formation after laparoscopic surgery: what do we know about the role of the peritoneal environment?
title_sort adhesion formation after laparoscopic surgery: what do we know about the role of the peritoneal environment?
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4090584/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25013705
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