Chegini Nasser
Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Institute for Wound Research, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32610, USA.
Front Biosci. 2002 Apr 1;7:e91-115. doi: 10.2741/A911.
Whether induced by infection, inflammation, ischemia, and/or surgical injury, peritoneal adhesions are the leading cause of pelvic pain, bowel obstruction and infertility. It is clear that while postsurgical peritoneal wounds heal without adhesions in some patients, others develop severe scarring from seemingly equal procedures; in addition, in the same patient, adhesions can develop at one surgical site and not in another. The mechanisms underlying the predisposition to form adhesions as well as their site specificity are completely unknown. However, a large number of intraperitoneal surgical procedures are performed each day in the USA, and thus many patients are at risk of developing postoperative adhesions. Therefore, understanding of adhesion formation at the molecular level is essential and in the absence of such information, attempts to prevent patients from developing adhesions will remain an empirical process. The unprecedented advancement in molecular biology during the past decade has led to the identification of many biologically active molecules with the potential of regulating inflammatory and immune responses, angiogenesis and tissue remodeling, events that are central to normal peritoneal wound healing and adhesion formation. Although, the insight into their importance in the development of tissue fibrosis has substantially increased, their major roles in peritoneal biological functions and adhesion formation remain at best speculative. This article reviews the clinical implications of adhesions and attempts to highlight some of the key molecules i.e. growth factors, cytokines, chemokines, proteases and extracellular matrix, that are recognized to regulate inflammation, fibrinolysis, angiogenesis, and tissue remodeling, events that are central to peritoneal wound repair and adhesion formation. Finally, the article discusses the potential application and site specific delivery of several active compounds that are developed to alter the local inflammatory and immune response i.e., cytokine/chemokine network, targeted gene delivery and development of a new generation of biomaterials to prevent adhesion formation. Such understanding of peritoneal biology not only assist us to better manage patients with adhesion, but also those with endometriosis and malignant diseases that affect the peritoneal cavity.
无论由感染、炎症、缺血和/或手术损伤引起,腹膜粘连都是盆腔疼痛、肠梗阻和不孕的主要原因。很明显,虽然一些患者术后腹膜伤口愈合时没有粘连,但另一些患者在看似相同的手术中却出现了严重的瘢痕形成;此外,在同一患者身上,粘连可在一个手术部位形成,而在另一个部位则不形成。形成粘连的易感性及其部位特异性的潜在机制完全未知。然而,美国每天都要进行大量的腹腔内手术,因此许多患者有术后发生粘连的风险。因此,在分子水平上理解粘连形成至关重要,在缺乏此类信息的情况下,试图防止患者发生粘连仍将是一个经验性过程。过去十年分子生物学取得了前所未有的进展,已鉴定出许多具有调节炎症和免疫反应、血管生成和组织重塑潜力的生物活性分子,这些都是正常腹膜伤口愈合和粘连形成的核心事件。尽管对它们在组织纤维化发展中的重要性的认识有了大幅提高,但它们在腹膜生物学功能和粘连形成中的主要作用充其量仍只是推测性的。本文综述了粘连的临床意义,并试图强调一些关键分子,即生长因子、细胞因子、趋化因子、蛋白酶和细胞外基质,它们被认为可调节炎症、纤维蛋白溶解、血管生成和组织重塑,这些都是腹膜伤口修复和粘连形成的核心事件。最后,本文讨论了几种活性化合物的潜在应用和部位特异性递送,这些化合物旨在改变局部炎症和免疫反应,即细胞因子/趋化因子网络、靶向基因递送以及开发新一代生物材料以防止粘连形成。对腹膜生物学的这种理解不仅有助于我们更好地治疗粘连患者,也有助于治疗患有子宫内膜异位症和影响腹膜腔的恶性疾病的患者。