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Review
. 2010 Apr;34(4):704-20.
doi: 10.1007/s00268-009-0382-y.

Peritoneal damage: the inflammatory response and clinical implications of the neuro-immuno-humoral axis

Affiliations
Review

Peritoneal damage: the inflammatory response and clinical implications of the neuro-immuno-humoral axis

Tarik Sammour et al. World J Surg. 2010 Apr.

Abstract

Background: The peritoneum is a bilayer serous membrane that lines the abdominal cavity. We present a review of peritoneal structure and physiology, with a focus on the peritoneal inflammatory response to surgical injury and its clinical implications.

Methods: We conducted a nonsystematic clinical review. A search of the Ovid MEDLINE database from 1950 through January 2009 was performed using the following search terms: peritoneum, adhesions, cytokine, inflammation, and surgery.

Results: The peritoneum is a metabolically active organ, responding to insult through a complex array of immunologic and inflammatory cascades. This response increases with the duration and extent of injury and is central to the concept of surgical stress, manifesting via a combination of systemic effects, and local neural pathways via the neuro-immuno-humoral axis. There may be a decreased systemic inflammatory response after minimally invasive surgery; however, it is unclear whether this is due to a reduced local peritoneal reaction.

Conclusions: Interventions that dampen the peritoneal response and/or block the neuro-immuno-humoral pathway should be further investigated as possible avenues of enhancing recovery after surgery, and reducing postoperative complications.

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