Summary:
Aims: An investigation of some relationships of routinely and rarely used biochemical markers to surgical
(operating) trauma.
Patients and methods: A group of 37 patients was divided to two subgroups according type of disease with
need a resection of large bowel for malignant or benign malady. Large bovel adenocarcinoma was dominated in
a subgroup of malignancies (23 patients, mean BMI 25.59, mean age 63.65 years) and Crohn’s disease and
complicated diverticullary disease were the reasons to operate in the second subgroup of benignities (14 patients,
mean BMI 21.21, mean age 39.5 year). Blood samples were taken before an operation, postoperatively (immediately)
and at 6:00 a.m. the 1st, 3rd and 5th postoperative day. The routine methods (albumin, CRP, cholinesterase,
haptoglobin, cholesterol), special methods (SOD, glutathion) and ELISA methods (leptin, IL-2r, IL-8, TNF) were
used for evaluation markers. The results were estimated by statistic methods Sigma-Stat, One Way ANOVA and
linear regresion test.
Results: The mean serum concentrations of albumin, leptin, cholesterol shifted down very clearly compared
to preoperative values. The mean serum concentrations shifted up the 3rd day postoperatively to 722% in
benignities and to 1814% in malignancies respectively. The values of cholinesterase, glutation, SOD, and
haptoglobin didn’t show any more serious dynamics perioperatively. The serum leptin concentrations correlated
with BMI but other markers serum concentrations didn’t correlate with BMI or with age.
Conclusions: The serum leptin, albumin, haptoglobin, CRP concentrations demonstrated serious dynamics
perioperatively. These concentrations are stabilized and they reach preoperative levels the 5th postoperative day.
Each-other markers correlation is minimal.
Key words:
biological markers – perioperative period – large bowel – operating stress
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