Despite use of surgical adjuvants, pelvic adhesions frequently develop following infertility surgery. Recently a resorbable biocompatible material, TC 7, has been designed to be used as a barrier to reduce adhesion formation. Reproducibly severe sidewall adhesions were only able to be created in one of six models tested. The model consisted of the following steps: excision of a full thickness 2 x 2-cm musculoperitoneal tissue mass, scraping of an adjacent 2-cm length of uterine horn, tamponading of all bleeding, and suturing (6-0 Vicryl) of normal tube and sidewall so as to directly approximate the traumatized tissues. Studies were conducted in 13 rabbits after creation of the bilateral sidewall and horn lesions, each serving as its own control. Choice of control and TC 7 sides was determined randomly. Adhesion formation was examined 2 weeks postoperatively. No residual material was noted at that time. Adhesion scores were the composite total of extent (0-4), type (0-4), and tenacity (0-3) of sidewall adhesions, and were significantly reduced on the TC 7 side as compared with the control side (mean 6.8 +/- 0.4 vs 9.0 +/- 0.3, median 6 vs 9, sign test P = 0.0032). No complications of use of the barrier were noted. It is concluded that use of TC 7, a resorbable biocompatible barrier, was able to significantly reduce postoperative adhesion formation on the rabbit sidewall.
Adhesions frequently develop after surgical procedures. Several groups have demonstrated that reduction of adhesion reformation is more difficult than reduction of adhesion formation. Previous studies have demonstrated the efficacy of Interceed (TC7) (oxidized regenerated cellulose) plus heparin in reducing adhesion formation. Adhesions were created using a previously standardized rabbit uterine horn model. After adhesiolysis, rabbits were assigned randomly to one of four groups: control, Interceed (TC7) alone, Interceed (TC7) plus 500 USP units heparin/horn, and Interceed (TC7) plus 1000 USP units heparin/horn. Adhesion reformation was evaluated 2 weeks later. Combination of the Interceed (TC7) barrier plus heparin resulted in a significant reduction of the adhesion reformation scores. It is concluded that Interceed (TC7) plus heparin is efficacious in reduction of both adhesion formation and adhesion reformation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.