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Clinical Trial
. 2005 Jan-Feb;52(61):161-5.

Effect of the herbal medicine Dai-kenchu-to for serum ammonia in hepatectomized patients

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  • PMID: 15783019
Clinical Trial

Effect of the herbal medicine Dai-kenchu-to for serum ammonia in hepatectomized patients

Takashi Kaiho et al. Hepatogastroenterology. 2005 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

Background/aims: Prolonged paralytic ileus occurring in hepatectomized patients may induce hyperammonemia or bacterial translocation, which injures the remnant liver function and sometimes causes post-resection liver failure. We examined the effectiveness of the herbal medicine, Dai-kenchu-to (DKT), on postoperative serum ammonia levels in patients with liver resection and compared it with lactulose.

Methodology: Patients with liver resection were divided into three groups. Lactulose group (n=31), 16g of lactulose was administered orally three times a day from the first postoperative day. DKT group (n=27), 5g of DKT was administered in the same fashion. Control group (n=26), neither lactulose nor DKT was administered. In all three groups, 16g of lactulose was administered three times a day for three days preoperatively.

Results: There was no significant difference among the groups in age, gender and preoperative hepatic functional values, such as ICG-R15 or galactose tolerance test. There was also no difference in parenchymal hepatic resection rate, operative time and amount of intraoperative bleeding volume. Postoperative serum ammonia levels were significantly lower in the DKT group than control and lactulose groups. Instances of delayed flatulence and occurrence of diarrhea were also fewer in the DKT group.

Conclusions: DKT may become a more effective and safe agent than lactulose in postoperative management of liver resection.

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