• Anesthesiology · Jul 1989

    Intraoperative coagulation changes in children undergoing liver transplantation.

    • Y Kang, L M Borland, J Picone, and L K Martin.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pennsylvania.
    • Anesthesiology. 1989 Jul 1;71(1):44-7.

    AbstractIntraoperative changes in blood coagulation were observed in eight children undergoing liver transplantation using a simplified coagulation profile (prothrombin time [PT], activated partial thromboplastin time [aPTT], and platelet count) and thrombelastography. Preoperatively, PT and aPTT were moderately prolonged (1.5 times control), and platelet count was greater than 100,000/mm3 in all patients but one (91,000/mm3). During the preanhepatic and anhepatic stages, PT, aPTT, reaction time, and coagulation time improved toward normal values, but platelet count and maximum amplitude did not change. Significant changes in coagulation occurred on reperfusion of the grafted liver: PT, aPTT, reaction time, and coagulation time were prolonged, and platelet count, maximum amplitude, and clot formation rate decreased. A heparin effect, which did not require treatment, was seen on reperfusion in four patients. Fibrinolysis occurred during the operation in five patients and was treated with Epsilon-aminocaproic acid (EACA) in one. Blood coagulation improved slowly, and values were close to baseline 90 min after reperfusion. In general, the coagulation changes seen in these children are similar to those in adults but less severe, possibly because of the preponderance of cholestatic disease in children compared with the more common hepatocellular disease in adults.

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