Abstract

To justify the concept of systemic membrane-destabilizing distress syndrome in surgery via analysis of phospholipid bilayer of cell membranes of various organs in urgent surgical abdominal diseases. Experimental research on dogs (n=90) included modeling of peritonitis, pancreatitis, intestinal obstruction, obstructive jaundice, and post-hemorrhagic anemia. Clinical and laboratory studies were performed in patients (n=119) with acute peritonitis, severe pancreatitis, intestinal obstruction, post-hemorrhagic anemia, acute cholecystitis, gastrointestinal bleeding, benign mechanical jaundice. Lipid profile in tissues and blood cells was determined by extraction, fractionation and densitometry. Moreover, we assessed intensity of lipid peroxidation and phospholipase activity, endogenous intoxication, functional state of organs and blood cells. It was revealed that all above-mentioned acute abdominal diseases are followed by significant changes of lipid bilayer and dysfunction of tissues in target organs, blood cells and other organs (liver, kidney, colon and small intestine, heart, lungs, spleen, brain). Changes of phospholipid bilayer are correlated with severity and course of the disease. These data were used to determine a new complex in surgery - systemic membrane-destabilizing distress syndrome. Its concept, pathogenesis, and diagnosis are presented. It was analyzed its role in development and progression of dysregulation pathology and thanatogenesis. Evidence of its importance in the pathogenesis of surgical aggression was obtained.

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