Osmotic nephrosis due to the use of anti-adhesive membrane intraperitoneally

2011 
Background. A common strategy for the prevention of intra-abdominal adhesions post-operatively has been the application of adhesion barriers into the peritoneal cavity. Side effects of these barriers are infection, abscesses and inadequate wound healing. There is no information about such a side effect of these materials on renal function. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of two different, commercially available polysaccharide-based anti-adhesive materials on renal function. Methods. In 24 adult Wistar rats, an abdominal midline incision was performed, and an anti-adhesion membrane was placed in the peritoneal cavity so as to cover its whole surface. Four rats were used as the control group. In 12 rats, a membrane of macromolecular polysaccharides, weighing 40 mg/cm 2 , was placed intra-abdominally and in 8 rats, a hyaluronic acid-hydroacidmethylcellulose membrane weighing 0.4 mg/cm 2 was placed. At 24 or 70 h, the rats were sacrificed, and we evaluated changes in serum creatinine, urea, uric acid, K and Na, and histologic examination of the kidney was performed. Results. The use of the thicker macromolecular membrane was associated with a rise in serum creatinine and urea levels, vacuolization of all the tubular epithelial cells and mild interstitial infiltration. Rats in which the hyaluronic acid-hydroacidmethylcellulose membrane was used did not show any creatinine elevation, and they presented milder histologic lesions. Conclusion. Polysaccharide and cellulose anti-adhesive membrane cause renal damage with tubular cell vacuolization. The severity of kidney damage is relative to the quantity of the membrane material used.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    18
    References
    5
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []