| Literature DB >> 24323675 |
Kunio Kawanishi1, Masayuki Yamato2, Ryouichi Sakiyama3, Teruo Okano4, Kosaku Nitta1.
Abstract
Postoperative intra-abdominal adhesions remain an unsolved problem despite significant progress in the surgical procedures themselves. They often lead to small-bowel obstruction, chronic abdominal and pelvic pain, as well as female infertility. The loss of mesothelial cells and several components of the inflammatory system following injury to the peritoneum results in fibrin formation and angiogenesis. The remaining fibrin matrix and angiogenesis lead to replacement by fibroblasts and fibrous band formation. The aim of this study was to develop a new therapeutic method of preventing intra-abdominal adhesions. We fabricated transplantable peritoneal cell sheets from the rat peritoneum by cell sheet engineering using a temperature-responsive culture system. The peritoneal cell sheets developed were composed of an upper monolayer of mesothelial cells and underlying multilayered fibroblasts, similar to the peritoneum in vivo. Transplantation of peritoneal cell sheets prevented tissue adhesion, fibrin deposition and angiogenesis, and, moreover, lymphangiogenesis and macrophage infiltration in a rat caecum cauterization adhesion model.Entities:
Keywords: abdominal adhesion; cell sheet; fibroblasts; mesothelial cells; scaffold-free tissue engineering; temperature-responsive culture system
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24323675 DOI: 10.1002/term.1860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Tissue Eng Regen Med ISSN: 1932-6254 Impact factor: 3.963