Local inflammatory response to suture material in surgical practice: experimental data

Objective: to study the effect of various types of suture materials, potentially suitable for cardiovascular surgery, on experimental surgical outcomes. Materials and methods. Polypropylene sutures (Prolene 6/0), titanium nickelide (TiNi) sutures (6/0) and absorbable polydioxanone sutures (Monoplus...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: T. N. Akentyeva, D. K. Shishkova, A. Yu. Burago, Yu. A. Kudryavtseva
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Federal Research Center of Transplantology and Artificial Organs named after V.I.Shumakov 2020-07-01
Series:Вестник трансплантологии и искусственных органов
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.transpl.ru/vtio/article/view/1196
_version_ 1826546316557156352
author T. N. Akentyeva
D. K. Shishkova
A. Yu. Burago
Yu. A. Kudryavtseva
author_facet T. N. Akentyeva
D. K. Shishkova
A. Yu. Burago
Yu. A. Kudryavtseva
author_sort T. N. Akentyeva
collection DOAJ
description Objective: to study the effect of various types of suture materials, potentially suitable for cardiovascular surgery, on experimental surgical outcomes. Materials and methods. Polypropylene sutures (Prolene 6/0), titanium nickelide (TiNi) sutures (6/0) and absorbable polydioxanone sutures (Monoplus 6/0) were used in the study. Male Wistar rats were used for in vivo studies. The effect of suture materials on abdominal adhesions was studied. In vivo calcification process was examined, and response of blood components in contact with suture materials was also assessed in vitro. Results. There is a negative inflammatory response to suture materials. The severity of this response depended on the type of material used. Polypropylene sutures demonstrated the most severe inflammatory response provoking massive adhesion formation. In addition, large calcium deposits were found both in the suture area and in the thickness of the biomaterial, stitched with prolene and implanted subcutaneously in the rats. Titanium nickelide sutures showed high hemocompatibility and biocompatibility. The Monoplus sutures caused minimal inflammatory response and provoked calcification of the biomaterial to a lesser degree. Conclusion. The suture material could have significant effects on surgical outcomes and could cause postoperative complications.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T00:52:18Z
format Article
id doaj.art-bc10525fbcc649a2b9e0bda7310d88ba
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1995-1191
language Russian
last_indexed 2025-03-14T05:31:49Z
publishDate 2020-07-01
publisher Federal Research Center of Transplantology and Artificial Organs named after V.I.Shumakov
record_format Article
series Вестник трансплантологии и искусственных органов
spelling doaj.art-bc10525fbcc649a2b9e0bda7310d88ba2025-03-05T14:11:52ZrusFederal Research Center of Transplantology and Artificial Organs named after V.I.ShumakovВестник трансплантологии и искусственных органов1995-11912020-07-0122215115710.15825/1995-1191-2020-2-151-157884Local inflammatory response to suture material in surgical practice: experimental dataT. N. Akentyeva0D. K. Shishkova1A. Yu. Burago2Yu. A. Kudryavtseva3Research Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular DiseasesResearch Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular DiseasesResearch Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular DiseasesResearch Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular DiseasesObjective: to study the effect of various types of suture materials, potentially suitable for cardiovascular surgery, on experimental surgical outcomes. Materials and methods. Polypropylene sutures (Prolene 6/0), titanium nickelide (TiNi) sutures (6/0) and absorbable polydioxanone sutures (Monoplus 6/0) were used in the study. Male Wistar rats were used for in vivo studies. The effect of suture materials on abdominal adhesions was studied. In vivo calcification process was examined, and response of blood components in contact with suture materials was also assessed in vitro. Results. There is a negative inflammatory response to suture materials. The severity of this response depended on the type of material used. Polypropylene sutures demonstrated the most severe inflammatory response provoking massive adhesion formation. In addition, large calcium deposits were found both in the suture area and in the thickness of the biomaterial, stitched with prolene and implanted subcutaneously in the rats. Titanium nickelide sutures showed high hemocompatibility and biocompatibility. The Monoplus sutures caused minimal inflammatory response and provoked calcification of the biomaterial to a lesser degree. Conclusion. The suture material could have significant effects on surgical outcomes and could cause postoperative complications.https://journal.transpl.ru/vtio/article/view/1196suture materialcardiovascular surgeryadhesioncalcificationhemocompatibility
spellingShingle T. N. Akentyeva
D. K. Shishkova
A. Yu. Burago
Yu. A. Kudryavtseva
Local inflammatory response to suture material in surgical practice: experimental data
Вестник трансплантологии и искусственных органов
suture material
cardiovascular surgery
adhesion
calcification
hemocompatibility
title Local inflammatory response to suture material in surgical practice: experimental data
title_full Local inflammatory response to suture material in surgical practice: experimental data
title_fullStr Local inflammatory response to suture material in surgical practice: experimental data
title_full_unstemmed Local inflammatory response to suture material in surgical practice: experimental data
title_short Local inflammatory response to suture material in surgical practice: experimental data
title_sort local inflammatory response to suture material in surgical practice experimental data
topic suture material
cardiovascular surgery
adhesion
calcification
hemocompatibility
url https://journal.transpl.ru/vtio/article/view/1196
work_keys_str_mv AT tnakentyeva localinflammatoryresponsetosuturematerialinsurgicalpracticeexperimentaldata
AT dkshishkova localinflammatoryresponsetosuturematerialinsurgicalpracticeexperimentaldata
AT ayuburago localinflammatoryresponsetosuturematerialinsurgicalpracticeexperimentaldata
AT yuakudryavtseva localinflammatoryresponsetosuturematerialinsurgicalpracticeexperimentaldata