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Hepatopulmonary syndrome and liver transplantation

โœ Scribed by Michael Krowka


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
89 KB
Volume
6
Category
Article
ISSN
1527-6465

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โœฆ Synopsis


Background/Aims: Hepatopulmonary syndrome is defined as a clinical triad including chronic liver disease, abnormal pulmonary gas exchange resulting ultimately in profound arterial hypoxaemia, and evidence of intrapulmonary vascular dilatation. We report five patients with liver cirrhosis diagnosed with hepatopulmonary syndrome who had associated chronic obstructive or restrictive respiratory diseases. Methods: Clinical, radiographic and contrast-enhanced echocardiographic findings, and systemic and pulmonary haemodynamic and gas exchange, including ventilation-perfusion distribution, measurements were assessed in all five patients. Results: Echocardiography was consistent with the presence of intrapulmonary vasodilation without intracardiac abnormalities, and high resolution computed tomographic scan features were compatible with clinical (3 cases) or histopathological diagnoses (2 cases) of associated respiratory disorders. The most common prominent functional findings were moderate to severe arterial hypoxaemia, caused by moderately to severely increased intrapulmonary shunting and/or mild to moderate low ventilation-perfusion areas, and hypocarbia along with increased cardiac output and a low pulmonary artery pressure and vascular resistance. Conclusions: These functional characteristics, classically reported in the setting of clinically stable, uncomplicated hepatopulmonary syndrome, conform to a distinctively unique, chronic gas exchange pattern. Equally important, these pulmonary haemodynamic-gas exchange hallmarks are not influenced by the coexistence of chronic cardiorespiratory disease states. These data may have clinical relevance for elective indication of hepatic transplantation in patients with life-threatening hepatopulmonary syndrome.


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