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Published in: European Journal of Medical Research 1/2018

Open Access 01-12-2018 | Research

Donor liver quality after hypovolemic shock and venous systemic oxygen persufflation in an experimental animal model

Authors: Azin Jafari, Hanno Matthaei, Vittorio Branchi, Edwin Bölke, Rene H. Tolba, Jörg C. Kalff, Steffen Manekeller

Published in: European Journal of Medical Research | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Background

The ever growing demand for liver transplantation inevitably necessitates an expansion of the donor pool. Utilization of “shock organs” is considered suboptimal to date while the associated outcome has hardly been investigated.

Materials and methods

Male Wistar rats underwent a period of 30 min of hypovolemic shock. After 24 h livers were explanted and prior to reperfusion underwent either 18 h of cold storage (CS; N = 6) or 17 h of CS followed by 60 min venous systemic oxygen persufflation (VSOP; N = 6). The outcome of “shock organs (SHBD)” was compared to heart-beating donor (HBD; N = 12) as positive control and non-heart-beating donor (NHBD; N = 12) as negative control animal groups. Liver function was assessed by measuring enzyme release (AST, ALT, LDH), bile production, portal vein pressure and hepatic oxygen uptake during reperfusion. For reperfusion, the isolated perfused rat liver system was used.

Results

Liver function was severely limited in NHBD group compared to HBD organs after 18 h of CS (e.g., AST; HBD: 32.25 ± 7.25 U/l vs. NHBD: 790 ± 414.56 U/l; p < 0.005). VSOP improved liver function of NHBD organs significantly (AST; NHBD + VSOP: 333.6 ± 149.1 U/l; p < 0.005). SHBD organs showed a comparable outcome to HBD and clearly better results than NHBD organs after 18 h of CS (AST; SHBD: 76.4 ± 21.9 U/l). After 17 h of CS accompanied by 60 min VSOP, no improvement concerning liver function and integrity of SHBD organs was observed while the results were severely deteriorated by VSOP resulting in higher enzyme release (AST; SHBD + VSOP: 213 ± 61 U/l, p < 0.001), higher portal vein pressure (SHBD: 10.8 ± 1.92 mm Hg vs. SHBD + VSOP: 21.6 ± 8.8 mm Hg; p < 0.05) and lower hepatic oxygen uptake (SHBD: 321.75 ± 3.87 ml/glw/min vs. SHBD + VSOP: 395.8 ± 46.64 ml/glw/min, p < 0.05) at 24 h.

Conclusions

Our data suggest that the potential of “shock organs” within liver transplantation may be underestimated. If our findings are reproducable in humans, SHBD grafts should be considered as a valuable source for expanding the thus far limited donor pool.
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Metadata
Title
Donor liver quality after hypovolemic shock and venous systemic oxygen persufflation in an experimental animal model
Authors
Azin Jafari
Hanno Matthaei
Vittorio Branchi
Edwin Bölke
Rene H. Tolba
Jörg C. Kalff
Steffen Manekeller
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
European Journal of Medical Research / Issue 1/2018
Electronic ISSN: 2047-783X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-018-0346-5

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