Abstract

The effects of denervation and warm ischaemia on quantitative and qualitative changes in small intestinal microflora following rat heterotopic small-bowel isotransplantation were assessed. Animals with Thiry-Vella fistula, but without transplants, acted as controls. Thirty and 40-fold increases in bacterial colony counts were seen in the isografts compared to controls at 2 and 7 days, respectively (P < 0.05). Aerobic faecal organisms predominated at 2 and 7 days, but an overgrowth of Flavobacterium meningosepticum occurred at 28 days in the transplanted and host bowels. The effect of warm ischaemia on intestinal microflora was assessed by the application of a microvascular clamp to the superior mesenteric artery for 90 min. The effect of denervation was assessed following microsurgical division of all nervous tissue around the superior mesenteric artery. After 7 days, lengths of jejunum and ileum were removed and intraluminal microflora assessed. The number of bacterial colonies isolated from the ileum in the warm ischaemia group was six times greater than the number in the control group, whereas no significant changes were seen in the upper bowel. In contrast, denervation led to a slight, but consistent, decrease in colony counts. These findings suggest that the increase in bacterial numbers in an isografted small bowel primarily results from warm ischaemia rather than from mesenteric denervation, and that physical aspects of the procedure may affect the development of sepsis following small-bowel transplantation.

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