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Título
Postoperative Evolution of Inflammatory Response in a Model of Suprarenal Aortic Cross‐clamping with and without Hemorrhagic Shock. Systemic and Local Reactions
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Postoperative Evolution
Inflammatory Response
Suprarenal Aortic Cross-clamping
Hemorrhagic Shock
Clasificación UNESCO
3213 Cirugía
Fecha de publicación
2005
Editor
Wiley
Citación
Lozano, F. S., Rodriguez, J. M., Garcia‐Criado, F. J., Barros, M. B., Conde, P. S., Gonzalez, L. M., Rodriguez, M., y Gomez‐Alonso, A. (2005). Postoperative evolution of inflammatory response in a model of suprarenal aortic cross‐clamping with and without hemorrhagic shock. Systemic and local reactions. World Journal of Surgery, 29(10), 1248-1258. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00268-005-7877-y
Resumen
[EN]Surgery of the abdominal aorta generates a systemic inflammatory response (SIR), a source of operative morbidity-mortality. In the present work we attempted to evaluate the evolution of SIR in an
experimental model that simulates elective and urgent surgery on the abdominal aorta. Fifteen mini-pigs divided into three groups were used.
The animals were subjected to suprarenal aortic/iliac clamping and bypass with a Dacron-collagen prosthetic graft. Groups were as follows: (1) sham (only aortic dissection); (2) clamping and bypass; (3) hemorrhage of 40%, pre-clamping, and bypass. Determinations included (1) tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-a) interleukin (IL)-1b, IL-6, IL-10, interferongamma; (2) myeloperoxidase (MPO), superoxide anion (SOA), superoxide dismutase (SOD), and malondialdehyde (MDA); (3) nitrites; (4) iNOS, (5) cell adhesion molecules (ICAM-1, VCAM-1) at 24 hours, 48 hours, and on day 7; and (6) NFjB at 48 hours. Our results point to an increase in all inflammatory variables, corroborated by their molecular regulators such as the expression of CAMs, iNOS, and NFjB. The alterations tended to normalize by day 7, after reperfusion. The results point to the great importance of SIR at all levels (molecular, nuclear, cellular, and systemic) in situations such as elective and urgent abdominal aorta surgery and the role that control of this response could represent for the future of vascular surgery
URI
ISSN
0364-2313
DOI
10.1007/s00268-005-7877-y
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