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- Isaac Felemovicius, Margaret E Bonsack, Gonzalo Hagerman, and John P Delaney.
- Department of Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.
- J. Am. Coll. Surg. 2004 Apr 1; 198 (4): 543548543-8.
BackgroundPolypropylene mesh used to repair abdominal wall hernias routinely induces dense adhesions if there is direct contact between the mesh and the viscera. Adhesions may lead later to difficult reoperation, intestinal obstruction, or enteric fistula.Study DesignA 2.5-cm square defect was surgically created in the rat abdominal wall and replaced with: 1) polypropylene mesh, 2) Sepramesh (SM), or 3) SM plus Seprafilm. Each group included 20 animals. Adhesion area as a percent of the mesh surface was subjectively quantitated by means of laparoscopy and at sacrifice. Evaluations varied from 7 to 28 days after mesh placement. Tissues were harvested at intervals for scanning electron microscopy.ResultsAdhesions were complete by day 7, with no change in area thereafter. Adhesion-free mesh surfaces were found on scanning electron microscopy to be carpeted with mesothelial cells from day 5 on. Polypropylene mesh alone induced adhesions in all rats (20/20). The mean area involved was 92%. With SM, 9 of 20 were adhesion-free. The mean area was 15%. When Seprafilm was added to SM, minimal adhesions developed in 5 of 20 rats, the mean area being 2%. Four of the five were single point omental attachments.Conclusions1) Sepramesh alone reduces polypropylene mesh adhesions by roughly three-quarters. 2) Sepramesh plus Seprafilm nearly eliminates such visceral adhesions. 3) Mesothelial cell coverage of polypropylene mesh confers adhesion resistance.
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