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Improvement of liver transplantation by reducing preservation-reperfusion injury

The liver differs from other solid organs in that it has a dual blood supply, receiving arterial blood via the hepatic artery and venous blood via the portal vein. The reperfusion injury which occurs after ischemia, has been studied to only a limited extent in the liver. In particular, the relative...

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Main Author: van As, Arjan Bastiaan
Other Authors: Kahn, Delawir
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Surgery 2018
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access_status_str Open Access
author van As, Arjan Bastiaan
author2 Kahn, Delawir
author_browse Kahn, Delawir
van As, Arjan Bastiaan
author_facet Kahn, Delawir
van As, Arjan Bastiaan
author_sort van As, Arjan Bastiaan
collection Thesis
description The liver differs from other solid organs in that it has a dual blood supply, receiving arterial blood via the hepatic artery and venous blood via the portal vein. The reperfusion injury which occurs after ischemia, has been studied to only a limited extent in the liver. In particular, the relative contribution of the portal venous blood and the hepatic arterial blood to the reperfusion injury has not been documented previously. During liver transplantation, implantation of the new liver is achieved by anastomosing the suprahepatic vena cava, the infrahepatic vena cava and the portal vein. At this stage, the liver is reperfused with portal venous blood only. Thereafter the hepatic arterial anastomosis is undertaken. The delay in providing the liver allograft with arterial blood will depend upon the difficulty in the dissection of the hepatic artery. The impact of the delay in rearterialization of the liver allograft has not been studied previously. Currently, the University of Wisconsin Solution is the gold standard for liver preservation. Celsior is a new cardioplegic solution, which has also been suggested for use for liver preservation. However, its role as a liver preservation solution has been studied to a limited extent. The aim of this study was: 1. To document the reperfusion injury after liver transplantation. 2. To document the relative contribution of the portal venous blood and the hepatic arterial blood to the reperfusion injury. 3. To investigate the impact of early rearterialization on the reperfusion injury after liver transplantation. 4. To investigate the effect of the new preservation solution, Celsior, on the reperfusion injury after liver transplantation. Large White X-Landrace pigs were subjected to orthotopic liver transplantation. The donor liver was stored in Eurocollins solution for 3 hours. The animals were randomly allocated to either rearterialization 60 minutes after portal reperfusion, rearterialization 20 minutes after portal reperfusion, simultaneously portal and arterial reperfusion, and rearterialization 20 minutes before portal venous reperfusion. In another experiment, the donor livers were stored in either Eurocollins solution, University of Wisconsin Solution, or Celsior. Blood samples were taken at various intervals and subjected to the following biochemical investigations. Malondialdehyde and vitamin A were used as markers of reperfusion injury. Hyaluronic acid levels were used as markers of endothelial cell function. Serum AST was used as a marker of hepatocellular injury. In summary, these studies showed that there was a significant reperfusion injury after portal venous reperfusion with no additional injury after rearterialization. Early rearterialization also resulted in a lesser reperfusion injury. There was also less hepatocellular injury with early rearterialization. Histological evidence of injury was also less in the livers which were rearterialized early. In addition, the livers preserved in Celsior had evidence of a lesser reperfusion injury. Thus in conclusion, in liver transplantation early rearterialization might result in better early graft function.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2018
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/26770 Improvement of liver transplantation by reducing preservation-reperfusion injury van As, Arjan Bastiaan Kahn, Delawir Surgery The liver differs from other solid organs in that it has a dual blood supply, receiving arterial blood via the hepatic artery and venous blood via the portal vein. The reperfusion injury which occurs after ischemia, has been studied to only a limited extent in the liver. In particular, the relative contribution of the portal venous blood and the hepatic arterial blood to the reperfusion injury has not been documented previously. During liver transplantation, implantation of the new liver is achieved by anastomosing the suprahepatic vena cava, the infrahepatic vena cava and the portal vein. At this stage, the liver is reperfused with portal venous blood only. Thereafter the hepatic arterial anastomosis is undertaken. The delay in providing the liver allograft with arterial blood will depend upon the difficulty in the dissection of the hepatic artery. The impact of the delay in rearterialization of the liver allograft has not been studied previously. Currently, the University of Wisconsin Solution is the gold standard for liver preservation. Celsior is a new cardioplegic solution, which has also been suggested for use for liver preservation. However, its role as a liver preservation solution has been studied to a limited extent. The aim of this study was: 1. To document the reperfusion injury after liver transplantation. 2. To document the relative contribution of the portal venous blood and the hepatic arterial blood to the reperfusion injury. 3. To investigate the impact of early rearterialization on the reperfusion injury after liver transplantation. 4. To investigate the effect of the new preservation solution, Celsior, on the reperfusion injury after liver transplantation. Large White X-Landrace pigs were subjected to orthotopic liver transplantation. The donor liver was stored in Eurocollins solution for 3 hours. The animals were randomly allocated to either rearterialization 60 minutes after portal reperfusion, rearterialization 20 minutes after portal reperfusion, simultaneously portal and arterial reperfusion, and rearterialization 20 minutes before portal venous reperfusion. In another experiment, the donor livers were stored in either Eurocollins solution, University of Wisconsin Solution, or Celsior. Blood samples were taken at various intervals and subjected to the following biochemical investigations. Malondialdehyde and vitamin A were used as markers of reperfusion injury. Hyaluronic acid levels were used as markers of endothelial cell function. Serum AST was used as a marker of hepatocellular injury. In summary, these studies showed that there was a significant reperfusion injury after portal venous reperfusion with no additional injury after rearterialization. Early rearterialization also resulted in a lesser reperfusion injury. There was also less hepatocellular injury with early rearterialization. Histological evidence of injury was also less in the livers which were rearterialized early. In addition, the livers preserved in Celsior had evidence of a lesser reperfusion injury. Thus in conclusion, in liver transplantation early rearterialization might result in better early graft function. 2018-01-09T08:58:57Z 2018-01-09T08:58:57Z 1999 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26770 eng application/pdf Department of Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Surgery
van As, Arjan Bastiaan
Improvement of liver transplantation by reducing preservation-reperfusion injury
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Improvement of liver transplantation by reducing preservation-reperfusion injury
title_full Improvement of liver transplantation by reducing preservation-reperfusion injury
title_fullStr Improvement of liver transplantation by reducing preservation-reperfusion injury
title_full_unstemmed Improvement of liver transplantation by reducing preservation-reperfusion injury
title_short Improvement of liver transplantation by reducing preservation-reperfusion injury
title_sort improvement of liver transplantation by reducing preservation reperfusion injury
topic Surgery
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26770
work_keys_str_mv AT vanasarjanbastiaan improvementoflivertransplantationbyreducingpreservationreperfusioninjury