Abstract

Globally, abdominal adhesions constitute a significant burden of morbidity and mortality. They represent the commonest complication of abdominal operations with a lifelong risk of multiple pathologies, including adhesive small bowel obstruction, female infertility, and chronic pain. Adhesions represent a problem of the entire abdomen, forming at the time of injury and progressing through multiple complex pathways. Clinically available preventative strategies are limited to barrier technologies. Significant knowledge gaps persist in the characterization and mitigation of the involved molecular pathways underlying adhesion formation. Thus, the objectives of this scoping review are to describe the known molecular pathophysiology implicated in abdominal adhesion formation and summarize novel preclinical regenerative medicine preventative strategies for potential future clinical investigation. A literature review was performed in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews Extension for Scoping Reviews. Included peer-reviewed publications were published within the last 5y and contained invivo preclinical experimental studies of postoperative adhesions with the assessment of underlying mechanisms of adhesion formation and successful therapy for adhesion prevention. Studies not involving regenerative medicine strategies were excluded. Data were qualitatively synthesized. A total of 1762 articles were identified. Of these, 1001 records were excluded by the described screening criteria. Sixty-eight full-text articles were evaluated for eligibility, and 11 studies were included for review. Novel and reliable preventative strategies are urgently needed. Recent experimental data propose novel regenerative medicine targets for adhesion prevention.

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