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  • 1
    ISSN: 1436-2813
    Keywords: intraperitoneal sepsis ; hepatic resection ; bile leakage ; blood transfusion ; gut-origin sepsis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In this study, the risk factors related to intraperitoneal septic complications occurring after hepatectomy (IPSCH) as well as the effect of various perioperative variables on the outcome of IPSCH between 1985 and 1990 were analyzed. Twenty-one of 211 patients (10.0%) developed IPSCH. The findings in the patients with IPSCH were compared with those in 190 patients without IPSCH. The significant variables associated with the development of IPSCH included a high incidence of accompanying chronic renal failure (14.3% vs 2.1%), a larger blood loss during surgery (2,130 vs 1,340 ml) as well as a greater amount of intraoperative blood replacement (1,130 vs 570 ml), and a greater weight of the resected liver (367 vs 233g). IPSCH occurred in 10 of 12 patients who had postoperative bile leakage. Eighteen patients (85.7%) with IPSCH were discharged from the hospital after non-operative management; however, the hospital death rate (14.3% vs 1.1%) was significantly higher in patients with IPSCH. This review suggests that the incidence of IPSCH has not decreased recently. Thus, to prevent IPSCH, at least following bile leakage, it is necessary to perform a careful division of the liver parenchyma followed by a bile leakage test, and when this complication occurs unexpectedly in patients who have a good functional reserve of the remnant liver, IPSCH can be effectively drained percutaneously under ultrasound guidance.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1436-2813
    Keywords: major hepatectomy ; multiple regression analysis ; portal pressure ; aging ; liver cirrhosis ; chronic hepatitis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The regenerative capacity of the liver was assessed using a volumetric method on computed tomography in 21 adults: 16 underwent a standard right hepatic lobectomy for hepatocellular carcinoma, there were hepatic metastases in 3 others, and 2 suffered from other diseases. The patients' ages ranged from 33 to 68 years with a mean age of 57.0 years. The regeneration rate was expressed as the rate of the volume increase of the remnant left lobe compared with the preoperative volume of the left lobe. A univariate regression analysis showed that the portal pressure had a highly inverse correlation with the regeneration rate of the liver (r = −0.4753,P = 0.0397), while a multiple regression analysis demonstrated the correlation between the portal pressure, age, and the regeneration rate (multipler = 0.5640). The regeneration rate of the normal liver (97.6 ± 53.5%) was significantly higher than that of the chronic hepatitic (43.0 ± 40.7%), and also tended to be higher than that of the cirrhotic liver (51.5 ± 13.2%). However, there were no differences between chronic hepatitic and cirrhotic livers. The portal pressure before hepatectomy of the normal liver (149 ± 19 mmH2O) was significantly lower than those of chronic hepatitic (188 ± 38 mmH2O) and cirrhotic (245 ±78 mmH2O) livers. We thus conclude that the regenerative capacity of the liver following a right hepatic lobectomy could be estimated on the basis of both portal pressure and age. The regenerative capacity was also influenced by underlying liver diseases.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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