Abstract

Corticosteroid (CS) administration amplifies the inhibitory effect of protein malnutrition (PM) on wound healing. Abdominal surgery in protein malnourished patients receiving corticosteroids (eg, advanced malignancy, transplant recipients) may be complicated by wound dehiscence or anastomotic breakdown. Although preoperative parenteral nutrition can reduce the incidence of these complications, this is not possible in patients requiring urgent surgical intervention. In a previous report we demonstrated that postoperative growth hormone (GH) administration could restore normal wound healing in PM rats. This study evaluates the effect of GH on wound healing in PM rats treated with CS. Forty-eight female Sprague-Dawley rats weighing 180 to 210 g were divided into four groups: (1) normally nourished; (2) PM only; (3) PM + CS; and (4) PM + CS + GH. PM rats (groups 2 to 4) received 5.5% protein chow every other day for 8 weeks. Control rats (group 1) received 23.4% protein chow for the same duration. Group 3 and 4 rats received prednisolone (2 mg/kg, intramuscularly) during the last 3 weeks of PM. All animals underwent precise 5-cm midline celiotomies. Postoperatively, rats in all groups were given 23.4% protein chow. Group 3 and 4 rats continued to receive CS postoperatively. Group 4 rats were given GH (0.5 mg/d, intraperitoneally) postoperatively for 5 days. Wound testing was performed on the 6th postoperative day after removal of the sutures. A balloon inserted into the peritoneal cavity through the vagina was gradually inflated. The pressure at which the wound disrupted was recorded as the wound bursting strength. The results of this study suggest that (1) postoperative GH restored the wound bursting strength in PM animals treated with CS to that seen in normally nourished controls, and (2) the wound healing enhancement of GH occurs at an early stage when compromised abdominal wounds are most likely to dehisce.

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