Producción Académica UCC

Splenic autoimplantation in omentum and stomach, hematoimmunological follow-up and B-cell repertoire in the graf

Álvarez, Fernando Andrés ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4644-5665, Colombres, Gustavo Adolfo, Viqueira, Alejandro ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7685-8853, Maldonado, Jorge Eduardo, Alvarellos, Emilio, Sambuelli, Rubén Horacio and Alvarellos, Teresita ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2618-7913 (2010) Splenic autoimplantation in omentum and stomach, hematoimmunological follow-up and B-cell repertoire in the graf. Acta Gastroenterológica Latinoamericana, 40 (4). pp. 339-346. ISSN 0300-9033

[img] PDF - Versión aceptada
Disponible bajo Licencia CC Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0 Internacional.

Descargar (263kB)
URL Oficial: https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=19931729500...

Resumen

Splenic autoimplantation appears to be the only alternative to preserve splenic tissue after splenectomy; however, its relevance is still controversial. We intended to study splenic autoimplantation in the greater omentum and stomach wall of rabbits and analyze its hematoimmunological performance and the preservation of original structures. Methods. New Zealand rabbits were divided in two groups: autoimplanted (A) (n=13) and splenectomized (S) (n=4). The animals of group A underwent autoimplantation of splenic fragments in the greater omentum and gastric wall. Both groups were evaluated by hemocytological tests, scintigraphy, immunoglobulin and C3 dosages, before the surgery and 2 and 4 months afterwards. After 4 months, the grafts were removed and histological examination and gen rearrangement of B-lymphocytes receptors by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were performed to assess the cellular diversity of clones. Results. The histological analysis demonstrated the presence of splenic tissue in 10 of the 13 cases (77%) with evident size reduction. The gastric location did not develop complications and demonstrated higher morphological correspondence to the autoimplanted tissue. Both groups showed significant decrease of IgM and increase of C3, without considerable differences between both of them during follow up. From the 8 grafts studied with PCR, 3 cases presented polyclonality and 5 oligoclonality. Conclusions. The revascularized grafts evidenced splenic regenerating tissue, probably associated to the oligoclonality detected by PCR. Consequently, we consider that autoimplantation is a reasonable alternative for splenectomized patients, even though the stomach placement and the high frequency of oligoclonality justify further investigation.

Tipo de documento: Artículo
Palabras clave: Splenic autoimplantation. PCR. Conejos. Estómago. Oligoclonality.
Temas: R Medicina > R Medicina (General)
Unidad académica: Universidad Católica de Córdoba > Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud
Google Académico: Citaciones en Google Académico Ver citaciones
URI: http://pa.bibdigital.ucc.edu.ar/id/eprint/3443
Ver item Editar ítem

Descargas mensuales a lo largo de los últimos 12 meses

Producción Académica UCC soporta OAI 2.0 con una URL base http://pa.bibdigital.ucc.edu.ar/cgi/oai2

Sistema de Bibliotecas
Universidad Católica de Córdoba
Campus Universitario. Avenida Armada Argentina 3555
Córdoba, Argentina

Sistema Nacional de Repositorios Digitales (SNRD) EPrints Logo