4.1 Article

The Length of Surgical Skin Incision in Postoperative Inflammatory Reaction

Publisher

SOC LAPAROENDOSCOPIC SURGEONS
DOI: 10.4293/JSLS.2018.00045

Keywords

Surgical skin trauma; Surgical incision; Skin stress response; Postoperative immune reaction

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background and Objectives: Surgery provokes inflammatory and immune responses, so efforts have been made to reduce host response by using less invasive techniques. The purpose of this experimental study was to investigate the surgical stress induced by skin incision and the role of liver response in this process. Methods: Seventy male anesthetized Wistar rats were subjected to a midline incision confined strictly to the skin (dermis) of either 1 cm long (n = 20), 10 cm long (n = 20), or no incision (n = 20) or served as controls (n = 10). Skin trauma was left open for a 20-minutes period, and then was meticulously sutured. At 3 and 24 hours later, laparotomy was performed on half the rats of each group, for blood and liver sampling. In serum and liver homogenates, cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant (CINC) 1/interleukin (IL)-8 and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha levels were measured with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and nitric oxide (NO) using a Griess reaction. Results: Skin trauma was found to significantly (P < .01) increase all inflammatory mediators tested (CINC1/IL-8, TNF-alpha, NO) in serum of operated rats versus controls, the increase being proportionally dependent on the length of skin incision. In liver homogenates, CINC1/IL-8 was significantly (P < .01) increased in operated animals versus controls, similarly to serum levels. In contrast, liver TNF-alpha levels were inversely related to serum levels, and a significant (P < .01) decrease in TNF-alpha was observed in liver homogenates of operated animals compared with the controls, indicating that the increased TNF-alpha in blood reflects liver TNF-alpha secretion. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that inflammatory and immune reactions induced by skin-only surgical trauma are closely correlated to the length of skin incision.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.1
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available