doctoralThesis
Emprego dos ácidos graxos de cadeia curta na colite de derivação fecal : estudo em ratos Wistar
Fecha
2011-09-05Registro en:
OLIVEIRA, Ariano Jose Freitas de. Emprego dos ácidos graxos de cadeia curta na colite de derivação fecal : estudo em ratos Wistar. 2011. 64 f. Tese (Doutorado em Ciências da Saúde) - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2011.
Autor
Oliveira, Ariano Jose Freitas de
Resumen
Diversion colitis is a chronic inflammatory process affecting the dysfunctional
colon, after a colostomy. It is postulated that nutritional deficiency of the colonic
epithelium by the absence of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) is one of the factors
responsible for the appearance of DC and that their employment could reverse
the morphological changes of the mucosa. The treatment of choice for fecal
diversion colitis (DC) is the reconstruction of the intestinal tract, although they
suggested therapeutic options using enemas. This study evaluates the effect of
SCFA in atrophy and inflammation in excluded colonic segments before and
after the installation DC. Forty Wistar rats were divided into four groups (n = 10
for each group), submitted colostomy with distal colon exclusion. Two control
groups (A1 and B1) received rectally administered physiological saline, whereas
two experimental groups (A2 and B2) received rectally administered short-chain
fatty-acids. The A groups were prophylactically treated (5th to 40th days
postoperatively), whereas the B groups were therapeutically treated (after postoperative
day 40), for 07 days. Histological sections stained with HE were used
for histological analysis of the thickness of the colonic mucosa excluded (t-
Student p ≤0.05). Inflammatory reaction of the lamina propria and mucosa were
measured with scores previously established (Mann Whitney p ≤ 0.05). There
was a significant thickness recovery of the colonic mucosa in group B2 animals
(p = 0.0001), which also exhibited a significant reduction in the number of
eosinophilic polymorphonuclear cells in the lamina propria (p = 0.0126) and in
the intestinal lumen (p = 0.0256). Group A2 did not prevent the mucosal atrophy
and significant increases in the numbers of lymphocytes (p=0.0006) and
50
eosinophilic polymorphonuclear cells in the lamina propria of the mucosa (p =
0.0022). Therapeutic use of short-chain fatty-acids significantly reduced
eosinophilic polymorphonuclear cell numbers in the intestinal wall and in the
colonic lumen; it also reversed the atrophy of the colonic mucosa. Prophylactic
use did not impede the development of mucosal atrophy