New hope for wound healing after bowel resection.

Ryung-Ah Lee
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Abstract

See Article on Page 132-139 The anastomotic leakage is a crucial complication after colorectal surgery and has a variable incidence, occurring in up to 1.8 to 12% of cases [1-3]. The importance of this potential complication is emphasized to colorectal surgeons, especially in the case of lower rectal surgery, because it is a major cause of surgical morbidity and mortality, early local recurrence for cancer surgery and the need for advertent additional surgery. Also, leakage increases both the hospital stay and the medical cost. The stem cell engineering technique is an emerging field of medicine and has been put on the stage because of the hidden potential of stem cells. Collawn et al. [4] recently reported the effectiveness of adipose-derived stromal cells in the skin wound healing process. Adipose tissue is a major reservoir of mesenchymal stem cells, which can be differentiated into endothelial progenitors, adipocytes, chondrocytes, etc. This article showed very promising results for the use of adipose stem cells in the bowel wall healing process. Rat adipose tissue harvested from the suprascapular and inguinal areas was used. After 14 days of organ culture, the outgrown cells in the fibrin matrix were recovered by selective degradation of the fibrin matrix, plated on tissue culture dishes, and propagated using a conventional two-dimensional culture. In vitro and in vivo experiments revealed that the experimental group showed significantly favorable histopathologic features, including less inflammation and more microvascular density. However, this feature does not confirm stem cell effects because vascular endothelial growth factor was used to induce endothelial differentiation during the cell manipulation stage. If this new technique is to be applied to clinical fields, an easier and more conventional process without additional pharmacological treatment would be expected.
肠切除术后伤口愈合的新希望。
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