Prevention of deleterious effects of reperfusion injury using one-week high-dose allopurinol.

Autor: Terzi, Cem, Kuzu, M., Aşlar, A., Kale, İ., Tanik, Adil, Köksoy, C., Terzi, C, Kuzu, A, Aşlar, A K, Kale, I T, Tanik, A, Köksoy, C
Předmět:
Zdroj: Digestive Diseases & Sciences; Feb2001, Vol. 46 Issue 2, p430-437, 8p
Abstrakt: Allopurinol has been widely used to reduce the severity of the reperfusion injury. However, conflicting data have been reported regarding the dosage, the duration of the timing, and the administrative regimen of the drug. The aim of this study was, therefore, to evaluate the effects of short versus long periods of allopurinol pretreatment on the anastomotic healing of intestines, directly after being subjected to ischemia–reperfusion (IR) stress. Furthermore, the effects of an allopurinol pretreatment on the survival rate following IR stress, was also assessed. One hundred thirty-seven male Wistar rats with a median weight of 235 (range, 180–275) g used in the study. In group I (control group, N = 20) superior mesenteric artery (SMA) and collateral vessels were isolated but not occluded. In group II, the profound IR group (PIR, N = 42), the SMA was occluded immediately distal to the aorta with collateral interruption using an atraumatic arterial clip for 30 min. In group III [two days of allopurinol (ALL) pretreatment group, 2ALL, N = 38], allopurinol (100 mg/kg body wt) was given intraperitoneally on a daily basis for two days prior to the experiment. In group IV (seven days of allopurinol pretreatment group, 7ALL, N = 37), the same pretreatment and the allopurinol schedule was performed for seven days before surgery. All animals underwent 3 cm of ileal resection and primary anastomosis, 10 cm proximal to ileocecal valve. Within each group, animals were anesthetized either on the third or seventh postoperative days. Abdominal wound healing, intraabdominal adhesions, anastomotic complications, anastomotic bursting pressure measurements, and bursting site were recorded as were the histopathologic evaluation. No rats in group I, 20 rats in group II, 18 rats in group III, and 7 rats in group IV died (P = 0.0003). Anastomotic dehiscence was found in one of 20 group I, in 11 of 22 in group II, in 9 of 20 in group III, and in 3 of 30 in group IV (P = 0.0003). On the third and seventh days, the median bursting pressures of the anastomosis were determined: 42 and 235 mm Hg in group I, 17 and 105 mm in Hg in group II, 22 and 183 mm Hg in group III, and 36 and 214 mm Hg in group IV (P < 0.0001). The burst occurred at the anastomoses in all animals tested on the third postoperative day, one in group I, six in group II, four in group III and one in group IV on the seventh postoperative day (P < 0.01). All deleterious effects of reperfusion injury on intestinal anastomosis healing, including survival rates and the histopathological parameters, were significantly prevented by seven days, but not two days, of high-dose allopurinol pretreatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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