The Determination of the Biocompatibility of New Compositional Materials, including Carbamide-Containing Heterocycles of Anti-Adhesion Agents for Abdominal Surgery

Author:

Kanasheva Nurdana1ORCID,Fedorishin Dmitry A.2ORCID,Lyapunova Maria V.2ORCID,Bukterov Mikhail V.3,Kaidash Olga A.3ORCID,Bakibaev Abdigali A.2ORCID,Yerkassov Rakhmetulla1,Mashan Togzhan1,Nesmeyanova Rimma4,Ivanov Vladimir V.3,Udut Elena V.3,Tuguldurova Vera P.2ORCID,Salina Margarita V.2,Malkov Victor S.2ORCID,Knyazev Alexey S.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry, L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University, Astana 010008, Kazakhstan

2. Faculty of Chemistry, National Research Tomsk State University, Tomsk 634028, Russia

3. Central Research Laboratory, Siberian State Medical University, Tomsk 634050, Russia

4. Department of Chemistry and Chemical Technologies, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Toraighyrov University, Pavlodar 140008, Kazakhstan

Abstract

Due to traumatic injuries, including those from surgical procedures, adhesions occur in over 50% of cases, necessitating exclusive surgical intervention for treatment. However, preventive measures can be implemented during abdominal organ surgeries. These measures involve creating a barrier around internal organs to forestall adhesion formation in the postoperative phase. Yet, the effectiveness of the artificial barrier relies on considerations of its biocompatibility and the avoidance of adverse effects on the body. This study explores the biocompatibility aspects, encompassing hemocompatibility, cytotoxicity, and antibacterial and antioxidant activities, as well as the adhesion of blood serum proteins and macrophages to the surface of new composite film materials. The materials, derived from the sodium salt of carboxymethylcellulose modified by glycoluril and allantoin, were investigated. The research reveals that film materials with a heterocyclic fragment exhibit biocompatibility comparable to commercially used samples in surgery. Notably, film samples developed with glycoluril outperform the effects of commercial samples in certain aspects.

Funder

National Research Tomsk State University

Publisher

MDPI AG

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