Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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A carboxymethylcellulose-heparin combination for the prevention of surgical adhesions.

BACKGROUND: Adhesions are a major clinical problem after abdominal surgery. Despite decades of research, therapies to prevent adhesion formation are suboptimal.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We have investigated combinations of carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) and heparin at preventing surgical adhesions in two rat models of adhesion formation. The first was the well-established cecal abrasion model, and the second was a model developed in our laboratory, the avascular mesenteric knot model. This model consistently produced adhesions at the knot in 90% of experiments and causes little or no tissue injury.

RESULTS: Topical administration of CMC 4% gave optimal results in the avascular knot model, but was less effective in the cecal abrasion model. This concentration of CMC was combined with a range of heparin doses between 0.5 and 160 IU/mL in the cecal abrasion model. These heparin doses, apart from the lowest (0.5 IU/mL), were effective in preventing adhesion formation in combination with CMC, as was the commercially available topical product Lipactin. The optimal dose was 30 IU/mL, that abolished adhesions, but there was little difference at doses between 2 and 160 IU. Heparin was effective in doses as low as 2 IU/mL when in combination with CMC. Heparin 160 IU/mL, but not heparin 30 IU/mL or Lipactin, significantly increased the degree of bleeding post cecal abrasion surgery.

CONCLUSIONS: Topical application of tiny doses of heparin, in combination with CMC 4% gel, significantly reduces adhesion formation in experimental models. We suggest that this cheap and, as far as we know, safe intervention should be evaluated in human clinical trials.

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