Transplantation
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Obliterative bronchiolitis is the major cause of long-term morbidity and mortality in heart-lung and lung transplant recipients. There is presently no completely effective therapy for the treatment of obliterative bronchiolitis. We have examined the effects of rapamycin (RPM) on the development of obliterative airway disease in murine recipients of heterotopically transplanted allograft tracheas. ⋯ In the RPM-treated animals, the airway was reconstituted with an attenuated squamous epithelium rather than a normal pseudostratified epithelium. No adverse side effects were observed with RPM doses up to 12 mg/kg/ day. These findings suggest a potential role for RPM, perhaps in combination with cyclosporine, in preventing and treating obliterative bronchiolitis in heart-lung and lung allograft recipients.
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Pregnancy is now a common, but high-risk event, in young women who have received transplants. Consequences to the fetus are known, but pregnancy may also interfere with graft function. We report the outcome of two successive and successful pregnancies in a 29-year-old woman with type 1 hyperoxaluria, who received a combined liver and kidney transplant. ⋯ Renal function was impaired before the first conception, worsened during both pregnancies, and returned to the previous level in both immediate postpartum periods. However, renal function has declined 17 months after the last delivery. This report shows the feasibility of successive pregnancies in multiple organ transplant recipients, but raises the question of long-term maternal kidney graft survival.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Randomized controlled trial to evaluate flush and reperfusion techniques in liver transplantation.
To determine the impact of different flush and reperfusion techniques on postreperfusion syndrome (PRS) and postoperative graft function, 100 transplants were randomly assigned into four groups as follows: group 1 (n=31), portal vein flush, no vena caval venting; group 2 (n=21), hepatic arterial flush, no vena caval venting; group 3 (n=29), portal vein flush with vena caval venting; and group 4 (n=19), hepatic artery flush with vena caval venting. Donor and recipient characteristics were similar. Extensive intraoperative and postoperative monitoring was performed and measurements were documented immediately before reperfusion and at 1, 5, 15, and 30 min after reperfusion. ⋯ We conclude that portal vein flush without vena caval venting provided a lower incidence of PRS than any other technique. Vena caval venting decreased the release of potassium into the circulation. Postoperative graft function was not significantly affected by flush and reperfusion techniques.
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Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) is often associated with hemodynamic instability upon reperfusion, recognized as postreperfusion syndrome. Changes in vascular tone due to humoral factors released upon reperfusion of the graft have been suggested as a possible mechanism. In this study, we looked at the perioperative changes in cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), a mediator of vascular smooth muscle relaxation, and investigated its relationship with hemodynamic parameters. cGMP was measured in the plasma of 14 patients undergoing OLT by radioimmunoassay serially at the preanhepatic and anhepatic phases, and after reperfusion at 30, 60, and 120 min. ⋯ Changes in cardiac output and systemic vascular resistance were not significant. The changes in cGMP correlated with pulmonary arterial pressure (r=0.74, P=0.005) and pulmonary vascular resistance (r=0.7, P=0.01). These data confirm the occurrence of hemodynamic changes during OLT, and provide evidence to suggest that the reduction in cGMP after reperfusion may mediate the vascular changes.