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  3. Indocyanine green plasma disappearance rate during the anhepatic phase of orthotopic liver transplantation
 

Indocyanine green plasma disappearance rate during the anhepatic phase of orthotopic liver transplantation

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.24217
Date of Publication
2008
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Universitätsklinik fü...

Institut für Klinisch...

Universitätsklinik fü...

Universitätsklinik fü...

Author
Brügger, Lukasorcid-logo
Universitätsklinik für Viszerale Chirurgie und Medizin, Viszeral- und Transplantationschirurgie
Studer, Peter
Universitätsklinik für Viszerale Chirurgie und Medizin, Viszeral- und Transplantationschirurgie
Schmid, Stefan
Universitätsklinik für Viszerale Chirurgie und Medizin, Viszeral- und Transplantationschirurgie
Pestel, Gunther Jürgen
Universitätsklinik für Anästhesiologie und Schmerztherapie
Reichen, Jürg
Institut für Klinische Pharmakologie und Viszerale Forschung
Seiler, Christian
Universitätsklinik für Kardiologie
Candinas, Daniel
Universitätsklinik für Viszerale Chirurgie und Medizin, Viszeral- und Transplantationschirurgie
Inderbitzin, Daniel
Universitätsklinik für Viszerale Chirurgie und Medizin, Viszeral- und Transplantationschirurgie
Series
Journal of gastrointestinal surgery
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1091-255X
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s11605-007-0352-3
PubMed ID
17960466
Description
Non-invasive pulse spectrophotometry to measure indocyanine green (ICG) elimination correlates well with the conventional invasive ICG clearance test. Nevertheless, the precision of this method remains unclear for any application, including small-for-size liver remnants. We therefore measured ICG plasma disappearance rate (PDR) during the anhepatic phase of orthotopic liver transplantation using pulse spectrophotometry. Measurements were done in 24 patients. The median PDR after exclusion of two outliers and two patients with inconstant signal was 1.55%/min (95% confidence interval [CI]=0.8-2.2). No correlation with patient age, gender, body mass, blood loss, administration of fresh frozen plasma, norepinephrine dose, postoperative albumin (serum), or difference in pre and post transplant body weight was detected. In conclusion, we found an ICG-PDR different from zero in the anhepatic phase, an overestimation that may arise in particular from a redistribution into the interstitial space. If ICG pulse spectrophotometry is used to measure functional hepatic reserve, the verified average difference from zero (1.55%/min) determined in our study needs to be taken into account.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/97841
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11605_2007_Article_352.pdftextAdobe PDF149.72 KBpublishedOpen
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