Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: KEGG:D06487 (Vicryl)
536 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Polyglactic acid and polyglycolic acid suture materials were compared in rat uterine and abdominal wall tissues for inflammatory response and tissue fibrosis. By 90 days after surgery, the tissue inflammatory reaction and fibrosis were significantly less in response to polyglactic acid suture (Vicryl) in both uterus and skin as compared with the response to polyglycolic acid (Dexon). In addition, the over-all tissue response in skin was significantly greater than that in uterus for both suture materials. The potential importance of tissue fibrosis--particularly in oviductal surgery, over and above the formation of adhesions between one organ and another--is emphasized. It is concluded that (1) the magnitude of tissue response to suture material varies for different tissues, (2) the degree of tissue wall fibrosis does not necessarily correspond to external tissue adhesions, (3) adhesions are maximal at the surgical knots regardless of the suture material used, and (4) polyglactic acid suture material may be preferable to polyglycolic acid suture material for infertility surgery, in which a minimum of tissue reaction is imperative.
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PMID:Comparison of polyglactic and polyglycolic acid sutures in reproductive tissue. 14 12

A prospective multicenter study was undertaken by the Intraabdominal Laser Study Group to assess the type and extent of ovarian adhesions formed following incisional ovarian surgery performed as part of a fertility-promoting procedure with the aid of the carbon dioxide laser. Ovarian healing with subsequent adhesion formation was evaluated by early second-look laparoscopy. Two suture closing materials were used--Surgilon (siliconized braided nylon, David and Geck, Wayne, NJ) and Vicryl (polyglactin 910, Ethicon, Somerville, NJ). Sixty-five ovaries were evaluated in 37 patients with subsequent adhesions found in 37% (18/49) of the Surgilon-closed ovaries and in 94% (15/16) of the Vicryl-closed ovaries. The adhesions were filmy in 83% (15/18) of the Surgilon group and 47% (7/15) of the Vicryl group. Dense/vascular adhesions were found in 17% (3/18) of the Surgilon group and 53% (8/15) of the Vicryl group. The subsequent conception rates were 68% (17/25) in the Surgilon group and 33% (4/12) in the Vicryl group, although the small number of patients and multitude of infertility factors made pregnancy rate comparisons difficult. One of the authors noted lack of tensile strength in the Vicryl-closed ovaries within 12 weeks postlaser laparotomy, which led to incisional dehiscence during laparoscopic lysis of ovarian adhesions. From this preliminary study, it is concluded that additional data are needed to more fully resolve the debate on whether absorbable or nonabsorbable suture is preferred for ovarian infertility surgery.
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PMID:Laparoscopic assessment of ovarian healing following CO2 laser microsurgery: Vicryl vs. Surgilon. 295 64

Despite use of surgical adjuvants, pelvic adhesions frequently develop following infertility surgery. Recently a resorbable biocompatible material, TC 7, has been designed to be used as a barrier to reduce adhesion formation. Reproducibly severe sidewall adhesions were only able to be created in one of six models tested. The model consisted of the following steps: excision of a full thickness 2 x 2-cm musculoperitoneal tissue mass, scraping of an adjacent 2-cm length of uterine horn, tamponading of all bleeding, and suturing (6-0 Vicryl) of normal tube and sidewall so as to directly approximate the traumatized tissues. Studies were conducted in 13 rabbits after creation of the bilateral sidewall and horn lesions, each serving as its own control. Choice of control and TC 7 sides was determined randomly. Adhesion formation was examined 2 weeks postoperatively. No residual material was noted at that time. Adhesion scores were the composite total of extent (0-4), type (0-4), and tenacity (0-3) of sidewall adhesions, and were significantly reduced on the TC 7 side as compared with the control side (mean 6.8 +/- 0.4 vs 9.0 +/- 0.3, median 6 vs 9, sign test P = 0.0032). No complications of use of the barrier were noted. It is concluded that use of TC 7, a resorbable biocompatible barrier, was able to significantly reduce postoperative adhesion formation on the rabbit sidewall.
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PMID:A model for sidewall adhesions in the rabbit: reduction by an absorbable barrier. 343 16

A major contributing factor to failure in reconstructive tubal surgery is adhesion formation. It can be due to the presence of a foreign body primarily represented by suture material. A new, synthetic, absorbable suture material, Polydioxanone (PDS), was compared to polyglactin -910 (Vicryl). Microsurgical anastomosis of the bicornuate rat uterus served as a model. The right horn was anastomosed with 6-0 or 8-0 PDS and the left horn with Vicryl of the same diameter. At 3, 7, 14, 30 and 60 days after the procedure three to four animals were killed and the histologic reaction estimated and compared between the two horns. At 60 days the remaining animals were killed, and adhesion formation around the anastomosis site was recorded. PDS was found to be histologically more inert than Vicryl and was associated with a less intense acute and chronic inflammatory response than Vicryl. Similarly, macroscopic examination showed that the adhesion formation was quantitatively reduced in the PDS-treated horns, and most of those adhesions were avascular. The high inertness and absorbability suggest a practical application of PDS in infertility surgery.
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PMID:Macroscopic and histologic tissue reaction to polydioxanone, a new, synthetic, monofilament microsuture. 642 59