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GI-Digestive

Liver transplant possible without transfusion

18 years, 6 months ago

9051  0
Posted on Sep 29, 2005, 11 a.m. By Bill Freeman

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Surgeons in California have succeeded in routinely transplanting livers without using blood transfusions in the recipients. "If we can do liver transplantation, which is one of the most difficult surgeries in the abdomen to do without blood transfusion, then we can pretty much do almost any surgery in the abdomen without blood transfusions," Dr. Singh Gagandeep told Reuters Health.
Surgeons in California have succeeded in routinely transplanting livers without using blood transfusions in the recipients. "If we can do liver transplantation, which is one of the most difficult surgeries in the abdomen to do without blood transfusion, then we can pretty much do almost any surgery in the abdomen without blood transfusions," Dr. Singh Gagandeep told Reuters Health.

In the Journal of the American College of Surgeons, Gagandeep and his colleagues at the University of Southern California-University Hospital in Los Angeles describe the strategies they used to treat 24 adult Jehovah's Witness patients, whose religion forbids the use of blood transfusions.

The 19 patients who received transplants from living donors were treated with drugs and supplements to build up their red blood cells. A shut was used in seven patients to check upper gastrointestinal bleeding or to decrease pressure.

"Then when you take them to the operating room, meticulous surgical technique has to be there, but over and above that there are things you can do that can curtail blood loss," Gagandeep said.

One measure is to salvage blood lost during surgery and to re-infuse it. Another is to maintain normal fluid levels in the circulation, he explained, "so the patient doesn't go into shock."

Other strategies include monitoring coagulation components in the blood and treating patients with drugs as needed. Finally, the surgeon noted, blood monitoring to assess the patients' progress after surgery should be used "judiciously."

All the patients survived except for two who had severe kidney dysfunction.

In addition to the liver transplant recipients, Gagandeep said, they have conducted 81 procedures to remove a portion of the liver from donors "in which we used only one unit of blood in one patient, so we have gotten it down to an art form."

"We should look at blood conservation not as an art but as a science," he added. "No matter how safe we make blood donation, there will always be the risk of disease transmission."

In 10 to 15 years from now, he predicted, "we hopefully will not have to use blood products at all, substituting synthetic products instead."

SOURCE: Journal of the American College of Surgeons, September 5, 2005.



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