Tokuka A, Kitai T, Tanaka A, Yanabu N, Sato B, Mori S, Inomoto T, Shinohara H, Yamaoka Y, Uemoto S, Tanaka K, Someda H, Fujimoto M, Moriyasu F
Second Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Kyoto University, Japan.
Hepatogastroenterology. 1996 Sep-Oct;43(11):1203-11.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: In liver transplantation, graft dysoxia after reperfusion may lead to graft failure. The aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between the factors, which were supposed to affect the oxygen supply to the graft, and the oxygenation state of the graft in order to determine which factor is important to prevent the graft from dysoxia.
The relationship between oxygen supply and oxygenation state of the graft was investigated in 56 successful cases of living related liver transplantation. Factors affecting the oxygen supply to the graft were considered as follows; portal venous flow (PVF), mean velocity of the hepatic artery (HA-Vm), hemoglobin concentration in the peripheral blood (Hb), size of the graft liver relative to the recipient body weight (G/R ratio), partial oxygen pressure in the arterial blood (PaO2), and rate-pressure product (BP*PR). Oxygenation state of the graft was estimated by oxygen saturation of hemoglobin in the graft tissue (graft SO2) as measured by tissue near infrared spectroscopy.
This study clarified the contribution of the factors which were supposed to affect the oxygen supply to the graft and the oxygenation state of the graft, and which factor is important to prevent the graft from dysoxia.