The Journal of surgical research
-
Activated protein C (APC) is a serine protease with anticoagulant and ant-inflammatory activities. APC has been shown to attenuate deleterious effects of ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury in many organs. In this study, we aimed to investigate the effects of APC on intestinal mucosal injury induced by superior mesenteric occlusion. ⋯ This study clearly showed that APC treatment significantly attenuated intestinal mucosal injury caused by superior mesenteric ischemia/reperfusion. Further clinical studies are required to clarify whether APC has a useful role in reperfusion injury during particular surgeries in which I/R-induced organ injury occurs.
-
Ischemic reperfusion injury (IRI) is an inevitable part cardiac surgery such as coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). While ischemic hypoxia and the ensuing normoxic or hyperoxic reperfusion are critical to the initiation and propagation of IRI, conditioning myocardial cells to an oxidative stress prior to IRI may limit the consequences of this injury. Hyperbaric oxygen (HBO2) is a modality of treatment that is known to generate an oxidative stress. ⋯ Current evidence suggests that HBO2 preconditioning may partly attenuate IRI by stimulating the endogenous production of nitric oxide (NO). As NO has the capacity to reduce neutrophil sequestration, adhesion and associated injury, and improve vascular flow, HBO2 preconditioning induced NO may play a role in providing myocardial protection during interventions that involve an inevitable episode of IRI. This current opinion review article attempts to suggest that HBO2 may be used to pharmacologically precondition and protect the myocardium from the effects of IRI that is known to occur during cardiac surgery.
-
Microcirculatory dysfunction is a common feature of sepsis. The potent vasoconstrictor endothelin (ET) is released in sepsis and endotoxemia, potentially contributing to sepsis-induced microcirculatory failure. In this study we tested the hypothesis that mixed ET receptor antagonism with tezosentan would improve splanchnic microcirculatory blood flow in acute porcine endotoxemia. ⋯ The findings of this study indicate that ET is involved in the microcirculatory dysfunction seen in the ileal and colon mucosa in early endotoxemia. Moreover, this detrimental effect was counteracted by i.v. administration of the mixed ET receptor antagonist tezosentan.
-
Although early enteral nutrition after insult has many advantages, effects of early nutritional manipulation on outcome after gut ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) remain unclear. We hypothesize that early enteral nutrition would improve survival after severe gut I/R by reducing organ injury and leukocyte activation. ⋯ Early nutrition administration after severe I/R reduces survival, possibly by increasing organ injury in IV-TPN and by other mechanisms in IG-TPN and CED.
-
Recent reports, following upon the reported outcomes of European randomized prospective trials of endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm repair (EVAR), have brought into question the appropriateness of some of the trials' main conclusions, particularly in patients deemed at high-risk for surgical intervention. Based on the data of these trials, specifically EVAR 2, it has been suggested that EVAR should not be performed in high-risk individuals due to the likelihood of poor outcomes and the lack of improved survival, both associated with higher costs. ⋯ Although prospective, randomized United States trial data on such patients are not currently available, some large retrospective studies and registry reviews provide a basis for comparison of these trials with US EVAR experiences. In this review, the European EVAR trials are analyzed along with these other US studies and the rationale for modifying some of the conclusions drawn from the trials is presented and general guidelines for the selective management of abdominal aortic aneurysm patients presenting with potential indications for intervention are proposed.