The effect of acute haemorrhage and of delayed blood replacement on wound healing: An experimental study

Author:

Nasution Ahmed F1,Taylor David E1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Physiology and Surgical Sciences, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, Royal College of Surgeons of England, Lincoln's Inn Fields, London WC2

Abstract

Summary Haemorrhage whether untreated or with volume replacement delayed for 1 h has been shown by other workers to result in weaker scars 7–10 days after wounding. Studies have been carried out 6 weeks and 3 months after median laparotomy in three groups of Wistar rat: control, bled 10 ml/kg without replacement and bled 10 ml/kg with replacement of heparinized shed blood after 1 h. At 6 weeks the burst pressure of the laparotomy scar was significantly less (Mann—Witney U) in both the haemorrhage group (n = 6; 181·7±30·5 mmHg s.e.m.; P = 0·026) and the replacement group (n = 6; 207·8±27·4 mmHg s.e.m.; P = 0·037) than in the control animals (n = 7; 301·9±42·0mmHg s.e.m.). At 3 months there were no significant differences between the groups. On histology there was no difference in cellularity between the groups, but in both the haemorrhage and replacement animals collagen was less abundant and less well organized. These differences also had disappeared by 3 months. Neither collagen nor the fibroblast ultrastructure showed significant differences between groups, all animals showing patchy vacuolation of endoplasmic reticulum of fibroblasts at 6 weeks. It is concluded that oligaemia slows wound healing but does not affect the ultimate strength of the scar.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

Reference12 articles.

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4. The relationship of acute anaemia to wound healing;Besser;Surgery,1944

5. Studies on wound healing and trauma with special reference to intravascular aggregation of erythrocytes;Zederfeldt;Acta Chir. Scand.,1957

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