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A novel coenzyme-Q approach for the prevention of postsurgical adhesion. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at how coenzyme-Q might help prevent sticky tissues (adhesions) that can happen after surgery in the belly area.
  • Researchers tested this on rats by giving one group coenzyme-Q and leaving the other group without any treatment.
  • Results showed that the rats who got coenzyme-Q had fewer adhesions and less tissue damage compared to the ones who didn’t get it, suggesting it could help after surgery.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Postoperative intraperitoneal adhesions are an unsolved and important problem in abdominal surgery. In the present study, the probable preventive role of coenzyme-Q in the development of peritoneal adhesions was investigated.

Material And Methods: Sixteen Wistar Hannover male rats weighing 300-350 g were randomly separated into two groups of 8 rats each. The cecum was abraded with a sterile gauze until sub-serosal hemorrhage developed. A patch of peritoneum located opposite to the cecal abrasion was completely dissected. No treatment was given to Group 1. Group 2 received 30 mg/kg coenzyme-Q, which was injected 2 mL intraperitoneally. All the rats were sacrificed on the postoperative 21 day, and after adhesions were scored macroscopically, tissue specimens of the peritoneum and bowel were subjected to histopathological investigation. Tissue and blood specimens were also taken for biochemical analysis to investigate antioxidant efficiency.

Results: Adhesion scores were significantly different between the control group and the coenzyme-Q group (p= 0.001). According to the tissue levels of GSH-Px, MDA, and SOD levels, there was no significant difference between the study groups (p= 0.074, p= 0.208, p= 0.526). According to the plasma GSH-Px and SOD levels, there was significant difference between the groups (p= 0.002, p= 0.001), but the difference was not significant at MDA levels (p= 0.793). The differences between the pathological scores of the control and coenzyme-Q (p= 0.028 for fibrosis; p= 0.025 for inflammation) groups were statistically significant.

Conclusion: This study confirms that coenzyme-Q is the potential application in the prevention of early postoperative adhesions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7515647PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5578/turkjsurg.4398DOI Listing

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