Abstract
Introduction: During bowel surgery, perioperative blood loss and hypotension can lead to transient intestinal ischemia. Recent preclinical studies reveal that the strength of intestinal anastomoses can be compromised after reperfusion. So far, this phenomenon has not been investigated in the very first days of healing when wound strength is lowest. Material and Method: Ischemia was induced in rats by clamping both the superior mesenteric artery and ileal branches for 30 min. Immediately after declamping, anastomoses were constructed in both terminal ileum and descending colon. The same was done in control groups after sham-ischemia. Anastomotic bursting pressure and breaking strength were measured immediately after operation (day 0) and after 1, 2, or 3 days. Anastomotic hydroxyproline content, gelatinase activity, and histology were analyzed. Results and Discussion: In ileal anastomoses, at day 1, both the breaking strength and bursting pressure were significantly (p∈
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Posma, L. A. E., Bleichrodt, R. P., Lomme, R. M. L. M., De Man, B. M., Van Goor, H., & Hendriks, T. (2009). Early anastomotic repair in the rat intestine is affected by transient preoperative mesenteric ischemia. Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery, 13(6), 1099–1106. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-009-0827-5
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