Background: This study improved small bowel preservation using University of Wisconsin (UW) solution in conjunction with hypothermic luminal perfusion.
Methods: Small bowels from Sprague-Dawley rats (n=4) were flushed vascularly with modified UW solution and flushed luminally: group 1, none (clinical control); group 2, UW solution; group 3, 1-hr oxygenated perfusion then static storage with UW; and group 4, 24-hr continuous oxygenated perfusion with UW. Energetics, lipid peroxidation, and histology were assessed during 24 hr at 4 degrees C.
Results: After 12 hr, adenosine triphosphate ranged from 0.5 to 0.8 micromol/g in groups 1 to 3 compared with 1.5 micromol/g in group 4. Even after 24 hr, levels in group 4 were more than twofold greater than levels in groups 1 to 3. Energy charge values ([adenosine triphosphate+adenosine diphosphate/2]/total adenylates) decreased from fresh tissue values of 0.69 in all groups except group 4 throughout 24-hr perfusion. Malondialdehyde (MDA; a product of lipid peroxidation) doubled within 4 hr in group 1 and remained high throughout storage. In groups 3 and 4, MDA levels increased as the time of perfusion increased; group 2 showed no elevated MDA levels at any time. After 12 hr, histologic integrity was superior in groups 3 and 4; however after 24 hr, the best Park's grade was observed in group 3 (median grade 4) compared with groups 1 (grade 7) and 4 (grade 6).
Conclusions: Our data indicate that perfusion clearly improves tissue energetics; however, mucosal integrity is superior with only a brief 1-hr period of luminal perfusion, despite limited improvements in energetics.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.TP.0000071381.17001.52 | DOI Listing |
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