| Literature DB >> 2120515 |
Y Zaizen1, E G Ford, G Costin, J B Atkinson.
Abstract
Nutrition is one of the most important factors affecting wound healing. Patients who have significant protein malnutrition and require emergency surgery are frequently encountered. Conventional nutritional preparation for surgery, with intravenous hyperalimentation, requires 10 to 14 days to demonstrate advantageous reversal of catabolism. Growth hormone is known to have an anabolic effect in malnourished animals. The purpose of this investigation was to study the ability of growth hormone, administered from the time of celiotomy, to improve wound strength in protein-malnourished animals and compare its efficacy with preoperative nutritional repletion. Rats were divided into four groups: Group I--normal control rats, group II--malnourished rats, group III--malnourished rats treated with growth hormone for 5 postoperative days, and group IV--malnourished rats refed normal chow for 3 days before operation. Controlled laparotomy wounds were closed with monofilament nylon which was removed at the time wound bursting strength was tested. Bursting strengths at the sixth day postoperative were as follows (means +/- SD): (table; see text) Wound strength of malnourished animals was significantly less than that of controls, (P less than 0.001). Wound bursting strength of groups III and IV was significantly improved over that of malnourished animals (group II), P less than 0.001. The bursting strength of group IV was significantly higher than that of group III. Growth hormone administration following celiotomy is nearly as effective in improving wound healing as preoperative nutritional repletion. These results suggest that growth hormone may be clinically applicable in preventing wound complications in malnourished patients requiring urgent or emergency laparotomy.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2120515 DOI: 10.1016/0022-4804(90)90032-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Surg Res ISSN: 0022-4804 Impact factor: 2.192