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Two-component polyethylene glycol surgical sealant influence on intraperitoneal infection in a refined rodent model.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2010 Aug 30;
Authors: Rodgers KE, Burleson FG, Burleson GR, Wolfsegger MJ, Lewis KM, Redl H
OBJECTIVES: This study determined the influence of a 2-component polyethylene glycol surgical sealant (Coseal) as an adhesion prevention device on sepsis-related mortality and/or systemic bacterial translocation to the spleen. STUDY DESIGN: A bacterial inoculum and telemetry probe were implanted in 50 treated and 49 untreated rats. Telemetry probes monitored core-body temperature to determine time of death. Spleens were collected on day 3 for quantitative bacteriology of Escherichia coli and Bacteroides fragilis. RESULTS: Median survival time and mortality of treated rats (37.0 hours, 54.0%) were noninferior to untreated rats (47.5 hours, 55.1%). Median E coli titers in treated rats (2.24 log colony forming units/spleen) were significantly less than untreated rats (4.32 log colony forming units/spleen). B fragilis titers were not different. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates intraperitoneal administration of a 2-component polyethylene glycol surgical sealant as an adhesion prevention device does not alter time to death or sepsis-related mortality and/or systemic bacterial translocation to the spleen.
PMID: 20810099 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
