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Intraperitoneal Oxygen/Ozone Treatment Decreases the Formation of Experimental Postsurgical Peritoneal Adhesions and the Levels/Activity of the Local Ubiquitin-Proteasome System
Author(s) -
Clara Di Filippo,
Annalisa Capuano,
Barbara Rinaldi,
Margherita Luongo,
B Lettieri,
Francesco Rossi,
Michele D’Amico
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
mediators of inflammation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.37
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1466-1861
pISSN - 0962-9351
DOI - 10.1155/2011/606718
Subject(s) - ozone , enterotomy , laparotomy , medicine , ozone therapy , oxygen , andrology , chemistry , surgery , pathology , alternative medicine , organic chemistry
We have investigated whether an oxygen/ozone (95%O 2 /5%O 3 ) mixture would have potential against the formation of experimental postsurgical peritoneal adhesions. In two groups of rats, one control intraperitoneally injected with 3 mL/rat of O 2 and one intraperitoneally injected with oxygen/ozone mixture (3 mL/rat equivalent to 300  μ g/kg ozone), we induced a midline laparotomy and an enterotomy at the level of the ileum to encourage the formation of peritoneal adhesions. Samples were taken from the parietal peritoneal tissue to assess the formation of adhesions 0 and 10 days after the surgical procedure and to assess the levels of ubiquitin and 20S proteasome. We found decreased formation of postsurgical peritoneal adhesions after treatment of the rats with 300  μ g/kg ozone associated with a decreased levels of ubiquitin and 20S proteasome subunit within the adhered tissue. Oxygen/ozone mixture is potentially useful for approaching the post-surgical peritoneal adhesions, and the UPS system is involved in this.

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