Methods: Forty New Zealand white rabbits were divided equally into control and treatment groups. Subjects were performed left anterior thoracotomy and partial pericardiectomy followed by epicardial abrasion. In control groups (group 1 and 2), the pericardium was left open to allow retrosternal adhesions. In treatment groups (group 3 and 4), the pericardial defect was closed with 0.02 mm bioabsorbable polylactide film. Postoperative macroscopic and microscopic evaluations were made by the same blinded observers at the end of the third week in group 1 and 3, and at the end of the sixth week in group 2 and 4.
Results: Macroscopic and histopathologic examinations revealed no significant differences between control and treatment groups in terms of adhesion formation. However, polylactide film supported the growth of a mesotheliumlike layer in the treatment groups.
Conclusion: Although polylactide film assists in the regeneration of mesothelial cells layer, it does not prevent the development of pericardial adhesions.
Mesothelial cells play a key role in adhesion progression and recovery.[2] Following tissue damage, the mesothelium releases a fibrinogen-rich exudate that includes chemical and inflammatory mediators, and the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin through these mediators leads to fibrous adhesions. In addition, it has been reported that fibrinolytic activity is significantly decreased in injured mesothelial cells.[2-4] Mesothelial cell migration from undamaged areas occurs in the first 48 hours, and mesothelial recovery is completed within seven days.[4] Therefore, methods implemented to prevent adhesion formation have focused on decreasing the inflammatory response, inhibiting the coagulation system, and activating the fibrinolytic system through pharmacological agents or separating adhesive surfaces from each other by using physical barriers during the recovery process. Even though there has been success in animal models,[5-7] it is very difficult to keep the pharmacological agents in the correct anatomic region in every day practice due to mediastinal drainage. Consequently, separating the affected surfaces from each other using physical barriers is the most effective method for preventing adhesions.
There are two types of physical barriers: bioabsorbable and non-absorbable. Recent studies have focused on bioabsorbable materials because nonabsorbable barriers can cause a long-term foreign body reaction that can lead to an increased risk of infection and fibrosis development that obscures the view of the cardiac anatomy during a reoperation. Successful results have also been reported in animal models with hyaluronic acid-carboxymethylcellulose,[8-10] polyvinyl alcohol,[11] and collagen membranes,[12] as well as fibrin sealant patches.[13]
The role of polylactic acid (PLA)-based bioabsorbable membranes in the prevention of abdominal adhesions is widely known. This acid does not interfere with wound recovery and it does not stimulate fibrosis formation. In addition, PLA is metabolized to the water (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2) within weeks and is then discharged through respiration. Furthermore, it does not lose its effectiveness with the presence of blood and external objects, and it can be manipulated easily and utilized whether suturing takes place or not. Moreover, a few studies have reported on the effectiveness of PLA for preventing pericardial adhesions,[14,15] but more research is needed to assess its efficacy in the prevention of postoperative pericardial adhesions.
In this study, we investigated the effect of PLAbased bioabsorbable membranes on pericardial adhesions in a rabbit model at the macroscopic and histopathological level.
The standard diet was stopped two hours before the surgical procedure, and the animals were only permitted to have water after that point. General anesthesia was provided by an intramuscular injection of 35 mg/kg ketamine (Ketalar®, Eczacibasi Ilac Sanayi ve Ticaret A.S., Luleburgaz, Turkey) and 5 mg/kg xylazine (Rompun®, Bayer Healthcare AG, Leverkusen, Germany). After being anesthetized, the animals were ventilated through a specially-designed Ambu bag with oxygen (O2), and skin antisepsis was provided by applying polyvinylpyrrolidone iodine (Batticon, Adeka Ilac Sanayi ve Ticaret A.S., Istanbul, Turkey) after the rabbits were shaved. Under aseptic conditions, the mediastinum was reached by performing a left anterior thoratocomy from the forth intercostal space followed by an approximately 2 cm2 pericardiectomy. Abrasion was performed with sterile gauze on the front and lateral surface of the heart. While the pericardium was left open in the control groups (groups 1 and 2), it was closed with a PLA-based membrane in 0.02 mm width (Surgi Wrap™, Macropore Biosurgery, Inc., San Diego, CA, USA) suturing to the pericardium with 6-0 prolene (Ethicon Inc., Cincinnati, OH, USA), in the treatment groups (groups 3 and 4) (Table 1). After placing a Minivac drain into the thoracic cavity, the muscle layer and skin were closed, and respiration continued to be supported by the Ambu bag until the rabbits regained consciousness. Once they were fully awake, the minivac drain was removed, and the animals were closely monitored for almost two hours.
Table 1: Groups characteristics
The rabbits were permitted to have a standard diet and were given water postoperatively. However, 500 mg paracetamol tablets (Parol, Atabay İlac Fabrikasi A.S., Istanbul, Turkey) were added to the postoperative food for three days to provide adequate analgesia, and 100 mg/kg ampicillin was given intramuscularly for four days.
The subjects were sacrificed at the end of either three weeks (groups 1 and 3) or six weeks (groups 2 and 4) using the same lethal dose of ketamine and xylazine, and then the mediastinum was reached via a sternotomy. The adhesion level was graded macroscopically by a surgeon who was blinded to the animal groups using the scale described in the study by Heydorn et al.[16] (0= no adhesion, 1= adhesion which could be separated easily by finger dissection, 2= intermediate adhesion strength, a nd 3 = a dhesion w hich n ecessitated s harp dissection) (Figure 1). The heart was removed along with its pericardium, and then the myocardium and epicardium specimens, including the adhesions, were taken. Ten tissue samples were obtained from every heart, and these samples were fixed in standard 10% neutral buffered formalin solution for at least three days.
The tissue samples were then embedded in paraffin blocks using the Shandon Histocentre™ 3 Embedding Center (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc., Waltham, MA, USA) and sectioned at 2 microns on the Leica SM2000R sliding microtome (Leica Biosystems GmbH, Wetzlar, Germany). Next, the sections were stained with hematoxylin-eosin (H-E) and examined under a Nikon Eclipse 80i microscope and the Nikon All-in-One Digital Imaging Controller DS-L1 (Nikon Instruments Europe BV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) at medium zoom (100-400 x plus objective) by the same blinded pathologist in order to examine the inflammation, fibrosis, and mesothelial layer formation.
The scoring schemes of Lu et al.[17] were used to grade the inflammation (0= nocell infiltration, 1= sparse infiltration of the neutrophils, lymphocytes, and plasma cells, 2= focal infiltration of the neutrophils, plasma cells, and lymphocytes, 3= diffuse infiltration of the neutrophils, plasma cells, and lymphocytes) and the fibrosis (0= no fibrous reaction, 1= sparse, focal fibrous connective tissue, hyalinization, and fibrin deposition, 2= a thin layer of fibrous connective tissue, hyalinization, and fibrin deposition, 3= a thick layer of fibrous connective tissue, hyalinization, and fibrin deposition). The mesothelial cell layer thickness was graded from 1 to 5 as described by Tsukihara et al.[18] in which 1 represented a very thin mesothelial cell layer and 5 signified a mesothelial cell layer with the same thickness as the native pericardium (Figures 2a, b, c, and d).
Statistical analysis
The analysis was performed using SPSS
version 15.0 for Windows (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL,
USA). The values were expressed as mean ± standard
deviation (SD). The Kruskal-Wallis H test was used to
determine the differences among the groups in terms
of the macroscopic adhesion, inflammatory reaction,
fibrosis, and mesothelial cell thickness scores, and
the Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare the
differences between two independent groups. The level
of significance was set at p<0.05.
Table 2: Comparison of the control and treatment groups at three weeks
Table 3: Comparison of the control and treatment groups at six weeks
Table 4: Comparison between the treatment groups
In addition, two of the rabbits were lost due to tamponade, one on the seventh postoperative day and the other on the 11th postoperative day, so two new rabbits were added to the study. Furthermore, no morbidity was seen in any of the groups.
Polylactic acid-based membranes, which have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for abdominopelvic surgery, have only recently started to be used to prevent the formation of pericardial adhesions.[14,24] Following the reports by Okuyama et al.,[15,22] Schreiber et al.,[23] in a comparative, random, single-center, blinded study, began utilizing PLAbased membranes during the gradual surgery of 13 cases with hypoplastic left heart syndrome in which they reported a decrease in the number of postoperative adhesions at a rate close to statistically significant levels. The FDA then approved other multicenter studies after their findings. In our study, we decided to use a PLA-based, 0.02 mm thick transparent film sheet. Furthermore, we also chose to perform a left thoracotomy over a sternotomy because of the better survival and low morbidity rates that had been reported in several studies conducted on rabbits. Furthermore, we selected a three-week period for our study because this is the timeframe within which most adhesions are observed. For the second evaluation period, six weeks was preferable because it allowed for the opportunity to evaluate long-term adhesion formation. No statistically significant differences were detected among the control and treatment groups in terms of macroscopic adhesion scores. However, when the three-week control and treatment groups were compared, the adhesion scores in treatment group 3 were lower than in control group 1, and like the results of Okuyama et al.,[15,22] they were close to statistical significance (p=0.075). However, it is possible that our results might have been affected by the thickness of the PLA membrane that was used. Iliopoulos et al.[14] used PLA films with various levels of absorption and found that the slowly-absorbed 0.05 mm material was more effective for preventing adhesion formation.
In terms of the inflammatory reaction scores, we detected no statistically significant differences among the control and treatment groups, which might be explained by the fact that bioabsorbable membranes do not prevent the inflammatory response from occurring after tissue damage, which is in contrast to the performance of pharmacological agents, but they separate the injured surfaces until the end of the healing process. In addition, when our fibrosis scores were analyzed, six-week treatment group 4 had markedly lower fibrosis scored than three-week treatment group 3 (p=0.035), but this could be related to the fibrinolytic activity because it decreases after injuries and increases over time. In both treatment groups, we observed a mesothelial-like layer on the epicardial surface, lending support to the hypothesis that the PLA membrane forms a skeleton for tissue regeneration during the recovery period. Microscopically, we observed that the 0.02 mm thick PLA-membrane layer was completely absorbed in both the three- and six-week groups, which lends credence to the findings of Iliopoulos et al.[14] in which the PLA was completely bioabsorbed over a four-week period.
Limitations of the hereby study could be noted as minimal epicardial damage, not applying CPB and minimal bleeding. Consequently, results in experimental studies displayed better results than human studies, explaining in relation with the coagulation system activated after CPB.[25]
Acknowledgment
We would like to thank Prof. Dr. Omer Yerci at the
Uludag University Faculty of Medicine Department
of Pathology for his support during the evaluation
period of the specimens and Dr. Deniz Sıngırlı at the
Uludag University Faculty of Medicine Department of
Statistics for her help with the statistical analyses in
our study.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this
article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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