Prevention of Acute Adhesive Intestinal Obstruction in the Postoperative
Period Prevención de la obstrucción intestinal adhesiva aguda en el postoperatorio
Aitbekov B. Dzhumabekov A. Alybaev E. Fakhradiyev I. Dzhumabekov B. Fazylov T.
1 January 2024AG Editor (Argentina)
Salud, Ciencia y Tecnologia
2024#4
Introduction: peritoneal adhesions are fibrinopurulent substances that link abdominal organs, which often cause clinical problems. Research seeks to examine the effectiveness of anterolateral transdermal myostimulation in reducing the postoperative adhesion formation and preventing AAIO. Method: this study investigates transdermal myostimulation efficacy in preventing postoperative adhesions through a two-phase experiment using piglets (n=20) and human patients (n=100). Data analysis was conducted using SPSS 26. Results: in piglets, the experimental group exhibited only mild adhesions (100 %) with a significantly lower mean number of adhesions (3,5 ± 0,53) compared to the control group (8,1 ± 0,32). The intervention delayed adhesion formation (8,1 ± 1,3 days vs. 5,5 ± 0,85 days; t =-5,332, p =,000). In human patients, the experimental group showed a significantly lower incidence of adhesions (30,0 % vs. 56,0 %, p =,007) and obstruction symptoms (16,0 % vs. 42,0 %, p =,004). Improved outcomes included higher EGEG scores (80,0 % vs. 32,0 %, p =,000), reduced postoperative complications (20,0 % vs. 42,0 %, p =,015), and shorter hospital stays (1,86 ± 0,54 days vs. 2,78 ± 0,42 days; t = 9,579, p =,000). The intervention effectively reduced adhesion-related complications and enhanced recovery. Conclusion: the research showed that the experimental intervention significantly reduced postoperative adhesions in piglets and human patients. The like findings with either model indicate that this approach would be a useful way of mitigating postoperative adhesions and improving patient outcomes.
Adhesions , Intestinal Obstruction , Laparotomy , Myostimulation , Ostoperative
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Department of General Surgery, Public State Enterprise “Karasai Clinical Multidisciplinary Central District Hospital”, Almaty, Kazakhstan
Kazakh Medical University “Higher School of Public Health”, Almaty, Kazakhstan
National Surgical Center, Ministry of Health, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
JSC “Kazakh National Medical University named after S.D. Asfendiyarov”, Almaty, Kazakhstan
Department of General Surgery
Kazakh Medical University “Higher School of Public Health”
National Surgical Center
JSC “Kazakh National Medical University named after S.D. Asfendiyarov”
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