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Lenhardt, R; Hopf, HW; Marker, E; Akça, O; Kurz, A; Scheuenstuhl, H; Sessler, DI.
Perioperative collagen deposition in elderly and young men and women.
Arch Surg. 2000; 135(1):71-4 Doi: 10.1001/archsurg.135.1.71
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Co-authors Med Uni Graz
Kurz Andrea
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Abstract:
HYPOTHESIS: Women deposit more collagen after major abdominal surgery than men. DESIGN: A post hoc analysis of data obtained from 2 prospective, randomized, double-blind clinical trials. SETTING: University hospital general surgical service. PATIENTS: One hundred sixteen patients undergoing colon resection. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Protein and hydroxyproline (collagen) deposition during the first 7 postoperative days in expanded polytetrafluoroethylene implants positioned subcutaneously. RESULTS: On univariate analysis, men and women deposited comparable amounts of collagen (257 +/- 120 vs 281 +/- 117 ng/mm, respectively). When potential confounding factors were entered into a generalized mixed-effects model, only the interaction between age and sex was a significant factor (P = .047). Collagen deposition decreased with age in men, being 317 +/- 133 ng/mm in men younger than 45 years, but only 238 +/- 113 ng/mm in those older than 45 years (P = .03). In contrast, collagen deposition was virtually identical in women younger than 45 years (280 +/- 133 ng/mm) and in those older than 45 years (281 +/- 110 ng/mm). Only 3 of these women were receiving hormone replacement therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Collagen deposition after surgery decreased significantly with age in men, while remaining unchanged in women. Younger men and women deposited similar amounts of collagen. Therefore, older men made less collagen after surgery than older women, perhaps explaining the consistent observation that wound dehiscence is twice as common in men than in women. Our results differ from previous studies conducted in healthy, nonsurgical volunteers, which showed that (1) young women made significantly more collagen than young men and (2) collagen deposition was reduced in postmenopausal women, but deposition returned to premenopausal values with hormone replacement therapy. Differences between our results and those reported previously likely stem from the populations studied. In particular, multiple perioperative factors decrease collagen deposition, which apparently obscures the differences observed previously in healthy, unstressed volunteers.
Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
Abdominal Muscles - pathology, surgery
Adolescent - administration & dosage
Adult - administration & dosage
Age Factors - administration & dosage
Aged - administration & dosage
Collagen - metabolism
Colorectal Neoplasms - pathology, surgery
Female - administration & dosage
Humans - administration & dosage
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases - pathology, surgery
Male - administration & dosage
Middle Aged - administration & dosage
Postoperative Complications - pathology
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - administration & dosage
Sex Factors - administration & dosage
Wound Healing - physiology

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