west china medical publishers
Author
  • Title
  • Author
  • Keyword
  • Abstract
Advance search
Advance search

Search

find Author "WU Yunhua" 3 results
  • Analysis of related factors of recurrence after abdominal incisional hernia repair

    Objective To explore the incidence of postoperative recurrence of abdominal incisional hernia and its related risk factors. Methods The clinical data of 213 patients with abdominal incisional hernia treated in the General Surgery of Shaanxi Provincial People’s Hospital from January 2015 to December 2019 were collected retrospectively, and the incidence of postoperative recurrence of abdominal incisional hernia and its related influencing factors were analyzed. Results A total of 213 patients underwent a complete follow-up. The follow-up time was 3 to 60 months, and the median follow-up time was 46 months. A total of 24 cases (11.27%) of hernia recurred after surgery. The univariate analysis results showed that body mass index (BMI), hernia ring size, incarceration, recurrent hernia, history of multiple abdominal operations, postoperative incision complications, factors such as increased abdominal pressure, and whether the patch were used for postoperative recurrence of abdominal incisional hernia influences (P<0.05). Further logistic multi-factor analysis results showed that BMI [OR=1.14, 95%CI (1.01, 1.29), P=0.040], incarcerated hernia [OR=8.94, 95%CI (1.94, 40.98), P=0.005], recurrent hernia [OR=10.91, 95%CI (2.09, 56.84), P=0.005], and hernia ring size [OR=1.15, 95%CI (1.03, 1.28), P=0.010] were related to the recurrence of abdominal incisional hernia after surgery (P<0.05). Conclusions The risk factors for hernia recurrence after abdominal incisional hernia repair include recurrent hernia, incarcerated hernia, hernia ring size, and BMI. For patients with high-risk factors, corresponding measures should be taken to prevent hernia recurrence.

    Release date: Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Prediction model of surgical treatment selection for acute adhesive small intestinal obstruction

    ObjectiveTo explore the risk factors affecting operation treatment selection of acute adhesive small bowel obstruction (ASBO), and establish a prediction model of surgical treatment selection to provide a guidance for clinical decision-making. MethodsThe patients with acute ASBO admitted to this hospital and met the inclusion and exclusion criteria, from January 2019 to December 2022, were retrospectively collected, and the patients were assigned into the surgical treatment and conservative treatment according to the treatment selection. The differences in the clinicopathologic factors between the patients with surgical treatment and conservative treatment were compared. Meanwhile, the factors with statistical differences (P<0.05) or the factors with clinical significance judged based on professional knowledge were included to screen the influencing factors of surgical treatment selection using the multivariate logistic regression analysis, and the selected influencing factors were used to construct the logistic regression prediction model equation. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) and its 95% confidence interval (95%CI) was used to evaluate the prediction efficiency of the prediction model equation. ResultsA total of 231 patients with acute ASBO were included, 117 (50.6%) of whom underwent surgical treatment and 114 (49.4%) underwent conservative treatment. In all 16 clinicopathologic factors between the patients with surgical treatment and conservative treatment had statistical differences (P<0.05) including the body mass index (BMI), preopeative high fever, intestinal type, sign of peritonitis, acute physiology and chronic health evaluation Ⅱ (APACHE Ⅱ) score excluded age scoring, abdominal surgery history and times of abdominal surgery history, times of pre-admission seek medical advice and preoperative conservative treatment time, the air-liquid level by X-ray plain film, and severe small bowel obstruction and adhesive bands by CT examination, as well as the white blood cell count (WBC), neutrophil percentage, albumin (ALB), and urea nitrogen. The multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that the acute ASBO accompanied by sign of peritonitis (β=1.778, P=0.028), history of abdominal surgery (β=1.394, P=0.022), and adhesive bands (β=1.321, P=0.010) and severe small bowel obstruction (β=1.183, P=0.018) by CT examination, WBC (β=0.524, P<0.001), APACHEⅡ score excluded age scoring (β=0.291, P<0.001), and BMI (β=0.191, P=0.011) had positive impacts on adopting surgical treatment, while preoperative ALB (β=–0.101, P=0.023) and conservative treatment time (β=–0.391, P<0.001) had negative impacts on adopting surgical treatment. The accuracy, specificity, and sensitivity of the logistic regression prediction model equation constructed according to these 9 influencing factors were 84.8%, 71.1%, and 77.7%, respectively. The AUC (95%CI) of the prediction model equation to distinguish selection of surgical treatment from conservative treatment was 0.942 (0.914, 0.970). ConclusionsAccording to the preliminary results of this study, surgical treatment is recommended for patients with acute ASBO accompanied by signs of peritonitis, history of abdominal surgery, adhesive bands and severe small bowel obstruction by CT, increased preoperative WBC, high APACHEⅡ score excluded age scoring, high BMI, preoperative low ALB level, and shorter preoperative conservative treatment time. And the logistic prediction model equation constructed according to these characteristics in this study has a good discrimination for patients with surgical treatment or conservative treatment selection.

    Release date: Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Phloretin combined with sodium hyaluronate inhibits formation of postoperative abdominal adhesions in a rat model and its mechanism

    Objective To investigate the efficacy of phloretin combined with sodium hyaluronate in preventing postoperative abdominal adhesion formation in rats and its possible mechanisms. Methods Forty rats were randomly divided into five groups, the rats in the sham-operatinon group only underwent open and closed abdominal surgery, and the remaining rats of four groups underwent cecum scratch-and-rub method of modeling to receive different treatments: the rats in the control group and the phloretin group (PHL group) were closed abdominally after modeling, while the rats in the sodium hyaluronate group (HA group) and the phloretin combined with sodium hyaluronate group (PHL+HA group) were closed abdominally by using 2 mL of sodium hyaluronate gel coated with the damaged abdominal wall and the cecum; the postoperative groups treated with phloretin (the PHL and PHL+HA groups) were treated with 2 mL of40 mg/kg phloretin dissolved in 0.5% sodium carboxymethylcellulose by gavage daily, and the rest of the groups were treated with 2 mL of 0.5% sodium carboxymethylcellulose solution by gavage. After general anesthesia, the rats were executed on the 7th day after surgery, and the Nair’s score was used to evaluate the adhesion status of each group on the 7th day after surgery; the adhesive tissue or normal peritoneal tissue were collected (cecum and its opposite side of the peritoneal tissue was collected in the sham-operation group), and immunohistochemistry was performed to evaluate the degree of staining with Nrf2 antibody, HE staining was performed to evaluate the inflammation scores, and Sirius red staining was performed to evaluate the thickness of the collagen fibers, and levels of transforming growth factor β1 (TGF-β1), malondialdehyde (MDA) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) were measured. Results All rats successfully completed the experiment. Compared with the control group, Nair’s score, inflammation score, expression level of TGF-β1, thickness of collagen fibers in the adherent tissues, and MDA level were significantly lower in the PHL+HA group (P<0.05), but the SOD level and expression lever of Nrf2 were significantly higher in the PHL+HA group (P<0.05). Conclusion Phloretin combined with sodium hyaluronate can prevent the formation of postoperative abdominal adhesions in the rat model, which may be related to reducing inflammation, reducing collagen deposition, activating Nrf2 pathway and inhibiting oxidative stress.

    Release date: Export PDF Favorites Scan
1 pages Previous 1 Next

Format

Content