Shimada M, Takenaka K, Fujiwara Y, Gion T, Hasegawa H, Shirabe K, Sugimachi K
Department of Surgery II, Faculty of Medicine, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan.
Hepatogastroenterology. 1998 Mar-Apr;45(20):483-7.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: The aim of this study was to evaluate the perioperative changes in intestinal permeability by using the phenolsulfonphthalein (PSP) test and to also to clarify the significance of the peroral PSP test in hepatic resection.
Fifty patients, all of whom underwent hepatic resection, were prospectively studied. Postoperative complications occurred in 16 patients, and 10 of these complications were infectious. A peroral PSP test, which was scheduled before operation and on postoperative days 3, 7, and 14, was performed as follows: after the administration of 30 mg of PSP, a 24-hour urine was collected, and the urinary PSP was measured by colorimetric assay. The correlation between the preoperative PSP value and various clinical variables, such as perioperative changes in urinary PSP excretion, and the relationship between the postoperative PSP value and postoperative complications, were investigated.
Preoperative urinary PSP excretion was found to increase in proportion to the degree of liver dysfunction. In contrast, urinary PSP excretion did not significantly change during the perioperative period. However, urinary PSP excretion on postoperative day 3 in patients with postoperative infectious complications (27.3%) was significantly greater than that in those without infectious complications (17.4%; p < 0.05). Furthermore, PSP excretion on postoperative day 3 in those with infectious complications was also significantly greater as compared to the preoperative level. The patients with a urinary PSP excretion level on postoperative day 3 of greater than 25%, exhibited infectious complications more frequently than patients with a level under 25% (60% versus 10.3%, respectively; p < 0.05).
The peroral PSP test is thus suggested to be a possible predictor of bacterial translocation after hepatic resection.