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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (
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28,634
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Since Shumway carried out the first successful heart-lung transplant (HLT) in Stanford in 1981, HLT has become a new therapeutic means for patients with end-stage pulmonary disease or arterial hypertension. However, it is still rarely carried out because of a lack of donors and the complexity of the surgery and postoperative course. This review described the criteria for proper donor and recipient selection, as well as the anaesthetic and postoperative management of HLT patients at Marie Lannelongue Hospital. The lack of suitable organ grafts results, at least in part, from improper donor management. Pulmonary oedema by fluid overloading and excessive haemodilution should be carefully prevented. Low doses of catecholamines and vasopressin maintain circulatory stability and convenient organ function. The indications for HLT (
primary pulmonary hypertension
, Eisenmenger's complex, and end-stage bronchopulmonary disease) are all characterized by severe pulmonary hypertension, hypoxaemia and cardiac failure. Careful anaesthetic induction is required to avoid circulatory
collapse
. Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) should be started early, so that mediastinal dissection may be carried out in satisfactory haemodynamic conditions. After unclamping the aorta, circulatory support with fluid and catecholamine infusion is often required. High inspired oxygen fraction and end-expiratory positive pressure may be required because of reperfusion pulmonary oedema. Blood transfusion is often needed as there are major blood losses due to dissection of the posterior mediastinum during CPB. Postoperative catecholamine administration is prolonged over several days. Negative fluid balance is often necessary to reduce pulmonary oedema. Improvement in surgical technique, early extubation, and late prescription of steroids have reduced the incidence of tracheal complications. Acute renal failure often occurs as a result of prolonged CPB, hypovolaemia, drug nephrotoxicity and sepsis. Bacterial complications (pneumonia, mediastinitis) are the main causes of early death. After the 15th postoperative day, opportunistic infections and allograft rejection are the main complications. Since 1981, major advances in HLT recipient management resulted in improved survival rates (70-80% at 1 year, and 60-70% at 2 years for the best teams). Despite the complexity of management, and the longterm threat of obliterative bronchiolitis, HLT is, at present time, the only possibility for these young patients to recover a normal quality of life.
...
PMID:[Anesthesia and intensive care for heart-lung transplantation]. 205 32
A 32-year-old female is described, who was admitted with symptoms of severe right heart failure. The most likely diagnosis of pulmonary embolism was excluded. Echocardiography and left-right catheterisation confirmed the diagnosis of
primary pulmonary hypertension
. A possible mediator in the process of PPH could be the appetite suppressants she had taken for some months after her second pregnancy. Before further pharmacologic tests could be performed the patient died in circulatory
collapse
. Postmortem pathological examination confirmed the diagnosis of PPH by the presence of narrowed pulmonary arterioles, media hypertrophy, thrombotic lesions and normal surrounding pulmonary parenchyma. The literature on
primary pulmonary hypertension
is revised with special emphasis on diagnosis and treatment algorithms.
...
PMID:Primary pulmonary hypertension with fatal outcome in a young woman and review of the literature. 1021 74
Idiopathic pulmonary artery hypertension (IPAH) is a progressive disease with a dismal prognosis and lung transplantation is often the only option for patients, who do not respond to pharmacological therapy. We report the use of an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) system in a 49-year-old woman with
primary pulmonary hypertension
, previously liver transplanted. The patient, listed for lung transplantation, developed respiratory and circulatory failure despite maximal pharmacological therapy and was successfully bridged to emergent bilateral lung transplantation with veno-arterial ECMO. Emergent veno-arterial ECMO was able to rescue the patient and bridge her to bilateral lung transplantation and should therefore be an option for patients with PAH and circulatory
collapse
.
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PMID:Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation as a bridge to lung transplantation in a patient with persistent severe porto-pulmonary arterial hypertension following liver transplantation. 2093 69