Schemmer P, Bunzendahl H, Raleigh J A, Thurman R G
Department of Pharmacology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 27599-7365, USA.
Transplantation. 1999 May 27;67(10):1301-7. doi: 10.1097/00007890-199905270-00002.
In a recent study, disturbances of hepatic microcirculation at harvesting caused by in situ organ manipulation dramatically reduced survival after a liver transplant. Because hepatic innervation is involved in the regulation of liver hemodynamics, the effect of denervation before harvesting was assessed here.
The livers were harvested from female Lewis rats (200-230 g) within 25 min. Briefly, after minimal dissection during the first 12 min, the livers were either manipulated gently or left alone for 13 min. Subsequently, an orthotopic liver transplant was performed after 1 hr of storage in cold UW solution. Some donors livers underwent microsurgical denervation before harvesting or rats were given hexamethonium (10 mg/kg, i.v.), a ganglionic blocking agent.
In the nonmanipulated group, survival was 100% after the transplant; however, gentle manipulation decreased survival by about 50%. Furthermore, manipulation elevated serum transaminases and bilirubin 6- to 8-fold 8 hr after the transplant and caused necrosis of about 25% of hepatocytes. After organ harvesting, the rate of entry and exit of fluorescein dextran, a dye confined to the vascular space, was decreased 2- to 4-fold, and the maximal increase of surface fluorescence was blunted about 2-fold. Pimonidazole binding, which reflects tissue hypoxia, was increased 2-fold by manipulation. Denervation of the liver before organ harvesting or treatment with hexamethonium prevented the effects of organ manipulation on all parameters studied.
These data indicate for the first time that hepatic denervation before organ harvesting prevents detrimental effects of brief, gentle manipulation of the liver during harvesting on survival after the transplant. This is consistent with the hypothesis that organ manipulation disturbs the hepatic microcirculation and causes hypoxia at harvesting using mechanisms dependent on innervation.
在最近一项研究中,原位器官操作导致的肝脏微循环紊乱显著降低了肝移植后的生存率。由于肝神经支配参与肝脏血流动力学的调节,因此在此评估了在获取肝脏前进行去神经支配的效果。
在25分钟内从雌性Lewis大鼠(200 - 230克)获取肝脏。简要来说,在前12分钟进行最少的解剖后,肝脏要么被轻柔操作,要么不进行操作13分钟。随后,在冷UW溶液中储存1小时后进行原位肝移植。一些供体肝脏在获取前进行显微手术去神经支配,或者给大鼠静脉注射六甲铵(10毫克/千克),一种神经节阻滞剂。
在未操作组中,移植后生存率为100%;然而,轻柔操作使生存率降低了约50%。此外,操作使移植后8小时血清转氨酶和胆红素升高6至8倍,并导致约25%的肝细胞坏死。器官获取后,局限于血管空间的荧光素葡聚糖的进出速率降低了2至4倍,表面荧光的最大增加减弱了约2倍。反映组织缺氧的匹莫硝唑结合因操作增加了2倍。在器官获取前对肝脏进行去神经支配或用六甲铵治疗可防止器官操作对所有研究参数产生影响。
这些数据首次表明,在器官获取前对肝脏进行去神经支配可防止获取过程中对肝脏的短暂、轻柔操作对移植后生存产生的有害影响。这与器官操作扰乱肝脏微循环并在获取时使用依赖神经支配的机制导致缺氧的假设一致。