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Evaluation of Postoperative Peritoneal Lavage in Standing Horses for Prevention of Experimentally Induced Abdominal Adhesions
Author(s) -
HAGUE BRENT A.,
HONNAS CLIFFORD M.,
BERRIDGE BRIAN R.,
EASTER J. LANE
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
veterinary surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.652
H-Index - 79
eISSN - 1532-950X
pISSN - 0161-3499
DOI - 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1998.tb00107.x
Subject(s) - medicine , horse , adhesion , surgery , saline , abdomen , abrasion (mechanical) , catheter , peritoneal fluid , peritoneal cavity , anesthesia , pathology , mechanical engineering , paleontology , chemistry , organic chemistry , engineering , biology
Objective —To evaluate the postoperative use of peritoneal lavage for prevention of experimentally induced intraabdominal adhesions in horses. Study Design —Areas of serosal abrasion were created on the jejunum of 12 horses. Postoperatively, six horses had peritoneal lavage, and six horses did not (controls). The number of adhesions was determined at necropsy 2 weeks after surgery. Animals or Sample Population—12 horses. Methods —Five sites of jejunal serosal abrasion were created in each horse. A 32 French thoracic catheter was placed into the right ventral aspect of the abdomen before closure of the abdominal incision. Treated horses had abdominal lavage with 10 L of lactated Ringer's solution on four occasions, then catheters were removed from all horses 34 hours after celiotomy. Horses were necropsied at 2 weeks to quantify the number of intraabdominal adhesions. Results —All control horses and one treated horse developed intraabdominal adhesions. The number of adhesions was significantly less ( P <.0293) in treated horses. No adverse inflammatory reactions appeared to be associated with repeated peritoneal lavage using lactated Ringer's solution or use of an abdominal drain. Conclusions —Peritoneal lavage reduced the frequency of intraabdominal adhesions. Clinical Relevance —When postoperative adhesions are likely to develop, postoperative peritoneal lavage may decrease the frequency of adhesion formation.

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