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. 2011 Apr-Jun;16(2):26-30.
doi: 10.12659/aot.881861.

The occurrence of postreperfusion syndrome in orthotopic liver transplantation and its significance in terms of complications and short-term survival

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The occurrence of postreperfusion syndrome in orthotopic liver transplantation and its significance in terms of complications and short-term survival

Barbara Bukowicka et al. Ann Transplant. 2011 Apr-Jun.

Abstract

Background: Postreperfusion syndrome (PRS) is a state of significant hemodynamic instability following graft reperfusion during orthotopic liver transplantation (OLTx). We aimed to investigate its risk factors and influence on patient outcome based on a single centre's experience.

Material/methods: A retrospective study on a group of 340 patients undergoing OLTx during the period 2005-2008 was conducted. Piggy-back technique was employed in 266 cases and classical technique in 64. PRS was defined as a decrease in mean arterial pressure greater than 30% below the baseline for a minimum of 1 minute during first 5 minutes of the reperfusion. Logistic regression analysis, Mann-Whitney test and 2-sample proportion test were used. P<0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results: PRS occurred in 12.1% of patients. We observed correlations between PRS and the following: longer cold ischemia time, operation with classical technique, longer duration of the operation, higher intraoperative erythrocytal mass (EM) and fresh frozen plasma (FFP) requirements, more frequent early post-operative complications, and lower 1-year survival. Retransplantation was needed nearly twice as often in the PRS-group, but the correlation was not statistically significant (the group was very small, as only 8 patients requested re-OLTx). The study did not demonstrate any statistically significant relationship between PRS and donors' age, recipients' age or sex, duration of the hospitalization, and occurrence of complications after discharge.

Conclusions: PRS occurrence seems to be associated with higher mortality rate and worse patient outcome. The study revealed a few risk factors that could be relevant in the prevention of PRS.

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