Tissue trauma in the peritoneal and pelvic cavities following surgery or bacterial infection results in adhesions that are a debilitating cause of intestinal obstruction, chronic pelvic pain, and infertility in women. We recently demonstrated that CD4(+) alphabeta T cells are essential for development of this process. Using a murine model of experimental adhesion formation, we now demonstrate that adhesion formation is characterized by the selective recruitment of Tim-3(+), CCR5(+), CXCR3(+), IFN-gamma(+) cells, indicating the presence of a Th1 phenotype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurgical adhesions are a common and often severe complication of abdominal or pelvic injury that cause pelvic pain, bowel obstruction, and infertility in women. Current treatments are of limited effectiveness because little is known about the cellular and subcellular processes underlying adhesiogenesis. Recently, we showed that Th1 alpha beta CD4(+) T cells mediate the pathogenesis of adhesion formation in a rodent model of this disease process.
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