ZIckri, M., Zamer, S., Gomaa, D., Sarhan, M., Reda, M., Hamed, W., Goda, M., Khaled, D. (2022). Skin Morphological and Resident Stem Cells’ Changes in Morbid Obese and Massive Weight Loss Female Patients Subjected to Sleeve-Gastrectomy: Histological, Biochemical and Clinical Study. Egyptian Journal of Histology, (), -. doi: 10.21608/ejh.2022.174151.1814
Maha Baligh ZIckri; Sherif Z Zamer; Dawlat E Gomaa; Mohamed Sarhan; Mahmoud F Reda; Walaa Hamed; Mai Abd Alaziz Goda; Doaa Khaled. "Skin Morphological and Resident Stem Cells’ Changes in Morbid Obese and Massive Weight Loss Female Patients Subjected to Sleeve-Gastrectomy: Histological, Biochemical and Clinical Study". Egyptian Journal of Histology, , , 2022, -. doi: 10.21608/ejh.2022.174151.1814
ZIckri, M., Zamer, S., Gomaa, D., Sarhan, M., Reda, M., Hamed, W., Goda, M., Khaled, D. (2022). 'Skin Morphological and Resident Stem Cells’ Changes in Morbid Obese and Massive Weight Loss Female Patients Subjected to Sleeve-Gastrectomy: Histological, Biochemical and Clinical Study', Egyptian Journal of Histology, (), pp. -. doi: 10.21608/ejh.2022.174151.1814
ZIckri, M., Zamer, S., Gomaa, D., Sarhan, M., Reda, M., Hamed, W., Goda, M., Khaled, D. Skin Morphological and Resident Stem Cells’ Changes in Morbid Obese and Massive Weight Loss Female Patients Subjected to Sleeve-Gastrectomy: Histological, Biochemical and Clinical Study. Egyptian Journal of Histology, 2022; (): -. doi: 10.21608/ejh.2022.174151.1814
Skin Morphological and Resident Stem Cells’ Changes in Morbid Obese and Massive Weight Loss Female Patients Subjected to Sleeve-Gastrectomy: Histological, Biochemical and Clinical Study
Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 03 December 2022
1Medical histolgy departement,Faculty of medicine ,Cairo university.
2Plastic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University
3Department of Plastic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University
4Department of General Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University
5General Surgery Department, Faculty of Medicine, MUST University
6Plastic Surgery Department, Faculty of Medicine, Health Ministry
7Medical biochemistry and molecular biology department, faculty of medicine, Cairo university
8Histology and Cytology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Helwan University
Abstract
Background & Objectives: Overweight patients meet obvious anatomical changes in the appearance of their skin and consequently morphological changes are expected. Weight loss in a massive manner results in redundancy of the skin following sleeve gastrectomy. The current work targeted to determine impact of morphological and morphoquantitative changes of epidermis, dermal fibers and endogenous stem cells (SCs) on surgical outcome in female patients with class III overweight and those with weight loss in a massive manner subjected to sleeve gastrectomy. Patients &Methods: Skin biopsies were obtained from excised skin during surgical intervention in thirty female patients, classified into three groups (10 patients for each group). Normal weight group presented with history of no weight loss who have done abdominoplasty. Morbid obesity (MO) group who have done sleeve gastrectomy. Massive weight loss (MWL) group presented with history of massive weight loss after sleeve gastrectomy and were submitted to abdominoplasty. Skin specimens were taken during abdominoplasty after surgical excision of excess abdominal skin in 1st and 3rd groups and during sleeve operation from wound edge in the 2nd group. Sections were subjected to histologic, biochemical, Phenotypic, morphoquantitative studies and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Results: Wound complications that occurred in MWL patients, were less in MO patients, and some of them required reoperation due to recurrence of redundancy. Associated phenotypic and morphometric changes in epidermal barrier, dermal fibers, degeneration marker and endogenous SCs were less evident in MO patients. Conclusions: Patients presenting with MWL following sleeve gastrectomy should accept higher complication rates and revisional procedures for recurrent redundancy due to altered skin behaviour. The beneficial therapeutic outcome could be related to the plasticity of skin SCs to transdifferentiate into adult skin cells of epidermal barrier and dermal fibers responsible for skin integrity.