Abstract:
Abstract:
Background: The adhesive disease and its associated complications, caused by adhesive mechanical bowel obstructions, mainly related to genetic causes
and disorders of cell homeostasis are one of the major health problems due to their diverse impact on the growing organism.
Material and methods: The clinical study was conducted on a group of 50 children aged 1 month – 18 years old with abdominal adhesion disorders,
complicated by a bowel obstruction, following surgical intervention. Apart from the assessment of the anamnesis, clinical, and imaging manifestations,
traditional bio-humoral homeostatic imbalance markers, endotoxemia levels, associated complications, and comorbidities, the blood inflammatory and
excessive fibrosis biomarkers were assessed at different clinical periods of the pathological process.
Results: A non-randomized pro- and retrospective study was carried out to assess the epidemiological, clinical and paraclinical, histopathological,
evolutionary, preventive, and treatment characteristics in order to determine the major complication triggers following a surgical intervention on the small
intestine, colon, appendix, or uterus, as well as to highlight their possible peculiarities in children.
Conclusions: This study completed the clinicians’ views on intraperitoneal adhesion pathophysiology, thus confirming the importance of the microbial
factor, inflammatory mediators, activation of humoral systems due to organic cellular lesions, the extension of the inflammatory response, as well as the
genetic factors depending on the acetylation phenotype in children.
Description:
Natalia Gheorghiu Scientific Center of Pediatric Surgery,
Laboratory of Surgical Infections in Children,
Nicolae Anestiadi Department of Surgery, Institute of Emergency Medicine,
Natalia Gheorghiu Department of Pediatric Surgery, Orthopedics and Anesthesiology
Nicolae Testemitanu State University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Chisinau, the Republic of Moldova