PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Metabolic signature of electrosurgical liver dissection.

  • Witigo von Schönfels,
  • Oliver von Kampen,
  • Eleonora Patsenker,
  • Felix Stickel,
  • Bodo Schniewind,
  • Sebastian Hinz,
  • Markus Ahrens,
  • Katharina Balschun,
  • Jan-Hendrik Egberts,
  • Klaus Richter,
  • Andreas Landrock,
  • Bence Sipos,
  • Olga Will,
  • Patrizia Huebbe,
  • Stefan Schreiber,
  • Michael Nothnagel,
  • Christoph Röcken,
  • Gerald Rimbach,
  • Thomas Becker,
  • Jochen Hampe,
  • Clemens Schafmayer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
p. e72022

Abstract

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BACKGROUND AND AIMS: High frequency electrosurgery has a key role in the broadening application of liver surgery. Its molecular signature, i.e. the metabolites evolving from electrocauterization which may inhibit hepatic wound healing, have not been systematically studied. METHODS: Human liver samples were thus obtained during surgery before and after electrosurgical dissection and subjected to a two-stage metabolomic screening experiment (discovery sample: N = 18, replication sample: N = 20) using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. RESULTS: In a set of 208 chemically defined metabolites, electrosurgical dissection lead to a distinct metabolic signature resulting in a separation in the first two dimensions of a principal components analysis. Six metabolites including glycolic acid, azelaic acid, 2-n-pentylfuran, dihydroactinidiolide, 2-butenal and n-pentanal were consistently increased after electrosurgery meeting the discovery (p<2.0 × 10(-4)) and the replication thresholds (p<3.5 × 10(-3)). Azelaic acid, a lipid peroxidation product from the fragmentation of abundant sn-2 linoleoyl residues, was most abundant and increased 8.1-fold after electrosurgical liver dissection (preplication = 1.6 × 10(-4)). The corresponding phospholipid hexadecyl azelaoyl glycerophosphocholine inhibited wound healing and tissue remodelling in scratch- and proliferation assays of hepatic stellate cells and cholangiocytes, and caused apoptosis dose-dependently in vitro, which may explain in part the tissue damage due to electrosurgery. CONCLUSION: Hepatic electrosurgery generates a metabolic signature with characteristic lipid peroxidation products. Among these, azelaic acid shows a dose-dependent toxicity in liver cells and inhibits wound healing. These observations potentially pave the way for pharmacological intervention prior liver surgery to modify the metabolic response and prevent postoperative complications.