Raucoules-Aimé M, Drici M, Goubaux B, Labib Y, Ichai C, Gugenheim J, Grimaud D
Département d' Anesthésia-Réanimation, Hôpital Saint-Roch, Nice, France.
Intensive Care Med. 1996 May;22(5):420-5. doi: 10.1007/BF01712158.
To evaluate the effects of nicardipine on hepatic blood flow in patients with recent liver transplants. Secondly, to evaluate the liver extraction of nicardipine in order to determine the influence of liver transplantation on its disposition.
Prospective self-controlled clinical study.
University hospital intensive care unit.
Eight patients in the early postoperative period of orthotopic liver transplantation.
Patients were given 5 mg of i.v. nicardipine. Systemic and splanchnic haemodynamic and metabolic parameters were measured before nicardipine administration (T0) and at 5 min (T1), 30 min (T2), and 120 min (T3) after administration. A catheter was inserted into a hepatic vein to determine the total hepatic blood flow (HBF) and the hepatic extraction coefficient of nicardipine. Nicardipine caused no significant changes in HBF, oxygen delivery, oxygen uptake, hepatic venous oxygen saturation, or the hepatic venous partial pressure of oxygen. Likewise, neither blood lactate concentrations nor arterial and hepatic venous lactate-pyruvate ratios were modified by nicardipine. The hepatic extraction coefficient of nicardipine was approximately 0.70 in the first 3 min after complete infusion, then decreased and remained stable at approximately 0.50, showing a non-linear first-pass metabolism pattern.
Nicardipine administration after liver transplantation appears to have no deleterious effects on HBF. Nicardipine can be classified as a drug of intermediate hepatic extraction coefficient, whose elimination partly depends on hepatic enzyme activity.