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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The use of University of Wisconsin (UW) solution in liver transplantation (LTX) has significantly prolonged preservation times and facilitated semielective transplant procedures. Despite this advantage potential risk factors related to the donor, recipient, or cold storage method will persist in the UW era and detrimental effects will be reflected by primary dysfunction (PDF) after LTX. Concern has been voiced about the maximum period of UW preservation in LTX and various cold
ischemia
times (CIT) are mentioned. To evaluate the effect of UW solution in LTX, a prospective European multicenter study was initiated in 1988 and short-term results have been reported previously. This report focuses on the long-term effects and survival of prolonged preservation with UW solution and primary function after LTX. Three hundred and fifteen LTXs were performed in 288 patients in participating European centers. Complete follow up of at least 6 years was available for 296 grafts in 277 patients. Effects of donor, preservation, and recipient risk factors on PDF including primary non-function (PNF) and initial poor function (IPF) were evaluated. Next, the effect of risk factors on graft survival (GS) was analyzed including the long-term impact of PNF and IPF using multivariate analyses and the Kaplan-Meyer method. PDF occurred in 15.2% (45/296) with PNF in 7.8% and IPF in 7.4%. Patients with IPF had a 34% lower GS at 3 months those with immediate function (IF; 58% vs 91%; P < 0.001). This difference persisted up to 6 years for patients with IPF with a 39% GS vs 72% after IF (P < 0.001). Median CIT was significantly longer in grafts with PNF compared to IPF or IF (P = 0.03). Long-term GS, however, was significantly influenced at a lower CIT threshold with a 6-year GS for CIT < or = 16 h of 67%, compared to a CIT > 16 h of 51% (P = 0.02). Other independent risk factors for the 6-year survival rate were re-LTX,
ABO incompatibility
, and recipient diagnosis of acute hepatic failure. In conclusion, liver patients with PNF, but not with IPF, have a significantly lower CIT. IPF is associated with a significantly lower 3 month GS compared to IF, but this difference of 34% does not further increase during a 6-year follow up. Although a short term follow up (3 months) shows that with UW solution CIT up to 18 h has no adverse effect on GS, the 6-year data clearyl suggest that CIT should be kept to less than < 16 h to avoid tetrimental effects on lang-term GS after LTX.
...
PMID:Long-term graft survival after liver transplantation in the UW era: late effects of cold ischemia and primary dysfunction. European Multicentre Study Group. 966 70
Biliary complications are a major source of morbidity, graft loss, and even mortality after liver transplantation. The most troublesome are the so-called ischemic-type biliary lesions (ITBL), with an incidence varying between 5% and 15%. ITBL is a radiological diagnosis, characterized by intrahepatic strictures and dilatations on a cholangiogram, in the absence of hepatic artery thrombosis. Several risk factors for ITBL have been identified, strongly suggesting a multifactorial origin. The main categories of risk factors for ITBL include
ischemia
-related injury; immunologically induced injury; and cytotoxic injury, induced by bile salts. However, in many cases no specific risk factor can be identified.
Ischemia
-related injury comprises prolonged ischemic times and disturbance in blood flow through the peribiliary vascular plexus. Immunological injury is assumed to be a risk factor based on the relationship of ITBL with
ABO incompatibility
, polymorphism in genes coding for chemokines, and pre-existing immunologically mediated diseases such as primary sclerosing cholangitis and autoimmune hepatitis. The clinical presentation of patients with ITBL is often not specific; symptoms may include fever, abdominal complaints, and increased cholestasis on liver function tests. Diagnosis is made by imaging studies of the bile ducts. Treatment starts with relieving the symptoms of cholestasis and dilatation by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreaticography (ERCP) or percutaneous transhepatic cholangiodrainage (PTCD), followed by stenting if possible. Eventually up to 50% of the patients with ITBL will require a retransplantation or may die. In selected patients, a retransplantation can be avoided or delayed by resection of the extra-hepatic bile ducts and construction of a hepaticojejunostomy. More research on the pathogenesis of ITBL is needed before more specific preventive or therapeutic strategies can be developed.
...
PMID:Causes and consequences of ischemic-type biliary lesions after liver transplantation. 1713 25
Intrahepatic biliary stricture (IHBS) after liver transplantation (LT) may develop in patients with hepatic artery thrombosis, chronic rejection, or
ABO incompatibility
, as well as in patients with prolonged warm
ischemia
in non-heart-beating donor (NHBD) LT. However, the clinical course and methods of management have not been well defined for IHBSs to date. Thus, the purpose of this study was to provide a classification of post-LT IHBS and to investigate patient prognosis. Forty-four patients who developed IHBS after NHBD LT were enrolled. On the basis of the cholangiographic appearance, patients were classified into 4 groups: unilateral focal (UF, n=8), confluence (CO, n=10), bilateral multifocal (BM, n=21), and diffuse necrosis (DN, n=5). The UF type was defined as cases with stricture only in the segmental branch of the unilateral hemiliver; the CO type in cases with several strictures at confluence level; and the BM type in cases with multiple strictures bilaterally. Cases with diffuse obliteration of peripheral ducts or destruction of the central architectural integrity, over a long segment, were classified as the DN type. Five patients with the CO type required several interventions requiring biliary dilatation, yet all patients with the UF or CO type had a good prognosis. Among the patients with the BM type, 3 patients (14.3%) died or underwent retransplantation due to biliary complications, and 7 (33.3%) required repeated interventions for >1 year without improvement. Moreover, among 5 patients classified as the DN type, 1 (20%) died of biliary sepsis, 2 (40%) underwent retransplantation, and the remaining 2 (40%) did not recover from persistent jaundice and life-threatening cholangitis despite multiple interventions. In conclusion, all patients classified as UF or CO had a good outcome with or without additional interventions. However, all patients with the DN type and about half the patients with the BM type did not recover from life-threatening complications, despite repeated aggressive interventions; early retransplantation was therefore the only treatment option for these patients.
...
PMID:Classification and prognosis of intrahepatic biliary stricture after liver transplantation. 1804 64
When considering advocacy of split-liver transplantation, it is important to understand whether comparable outcomes can be achieved. The goal of this study was to identify donor and transplant characteristics predictive of comparable outcomes by risk factor analysis. Using the United Network for Organ Sharing/ Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network data base between January 1996 and May 2006, first time adult/child split cases (568 adults, 508 children) were examined. In multivariate analysis, recipient medical condition (hospitalization), status 1 assignment,
ABO incompatibility
, donor age (>40 years), donor body weight (< or = 40 kg), calculated whole graft volume to recipient body weight ratio (cGRWR < or = 1.5%) and no sharing between centers were significant risk factors in adult recipients. Recipient diagnosis of tumor, dialysis prior to transplant, recipient body weight (< or = 6 kg), donor age (>30 years), donor history of cardiac arrest after declaration of death and cold
ischemia
time (CIT > 6 h) increased the risk of graft failure in pediatric recipients. The livers from young donors showed comparable outcomes to whole deceased liver transplantation (LT) when other transplant-related risk factors were minimized in adult recipients. Reducing CIT is important to obtain comparable outcomes to living donor LT in pediatric recipients.
...
PMID:Factors affecting graft survival after adult/child split-liver transplantation: analysis of the UNOS/OPTN data base. 1852 46
Since a 1989 report demonstrating successful living donor liver transplantation (LDLT), living donors have been increasingly used to overcome the disparity between organ supply and demand, especially in the cases of pediatric patients. Although short-term graft outcomes after LDLT have improved significantly because of progress in surgical techniques and immunosuppression, biliary stricture (BS) remains the Achilles heel of pediatric LDLT and is the major cause of significant long-term morbidity. BS results in poor quality of life or even in graft loss after LDLT, with a reported incidence of BS after pediatric LDLT of 10% to 35%. The suggested risk factors for BS after LDLT are hepatic arterial thrombosis, bile duct
ischemia
, acute cellular rejection, older donor age, and
ABO incompatibility
. Duct-to-duct biliary reconstruction, which enables an endoscopic approach to be attempted after BS, is the preferred technique for LDLT. Endoscopic approaches are less invasive and more convenient for recipients than surgical and percutaneous interventions. However, the major cause of end-stage liver disease in pediatric recipients is biliary atresia, and hepaticojejunostomy is needed to reconstruct the bile duct because of the lack of recipient bile duct. Endoscopic approaches for BS are usually less favorable in patients with hepaticojejunostomy than in those with duct-to-duct biliary reconstruction. Treatment options for BS after hepaticojejunostomy at many centers thus involve interventional radiology or surgical reintervention. Although endoscopic approaches remain controversial in pediatric recipients, several reports have shown them to be safe and less invasive.
...
PMID:Biliary Stricture: The Achilles Heel of Pediatric Living Donor Liver Transplantation. 3072 Jun 79