Tıp Fakültesi / Faculty of Medicine
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11727/1403
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Item Early Pulmonary Complications of Liver Transplant(2014) Dogrul, Mustafa Ilgaz; Akcay, Sule; Bozbas, Serife Savas; Dedekarginoglu, Balam Er; Eyuboglu, Fusun Oner; Moray, Gokhan; Haberal, Mehmet; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7230-202X; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5525-8207; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2498-7287; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3462-7632; 24635815; AAI-8064-2021; AAR-4338-2020; AAE-1041-2021; AAJ-8097-2021Objectives: Pulmonary complications are a leading problem after a liver transplant. This study sought to predict postoperative early complications by a chest radiograph performed after a transplant among adult orthotopic liver transplant recipients. Materials and Methods: One hundred thirty-five patients (43 women, 92 men; mean age, 40 y; range, 16-66 y) were included and their medical data reviewed retrospectively. A postoperative chest radiograph of each patient was evaluated to check for pulmonary complications. Results: Smoking history was noted in 61 patients (45.2%). Postoperative first chest radiograph evaluation showed normal findings in 56 patients (41.5%). Right pleural effusion was found in 25 patients (18.5%), and atelectasis was found in 25 (18.5%). Bilateral pleural effusion was the second most-frequent finding on postoperative radiograph (14.8%). Effusion accompanied by atelectasis was found in 3 patients (2.2%). Other postoperative chest radiograph findings were consolidation (n=2, 1.5%), left pleural effusion (n=2, 1.5%), and bronchiectasis (n=2, 1.5%). Conclusions: We investigated the reflection of the first chest radiograph after liver transplant on postoperative early complications. Postoperative first chest radiograph can be an inexpensive and accessible diagnostic tool for predicting postoperative problems.Item Liver Transplant and Reexpansion Pulmonary Edema: A Case Report(2018) Kara, Sibel; Sen, Nazan; Akcay, Sule; Moray, Gokhan; Kus, Murat; Haberal, Mehmet; 0000-0002-4171-7484; 0000-0002-8360-6459; 0000-0003-2498-7287; 0000-0001-6529-7579; 0000-0002-3462-7632; 29528016; AAI-8069-2021; AAI-8947-2021; AAB-5175-2021; AAE-1041-2021; AAJ-7870-2021; AAJ-8097-2021Hydrothorax occurs frequently in patients with end-stage liver disease and usually requires drainage of pulmonary effusion during the hepatectomy phase of liver transplant. Reexpansion pulmonary edema is a rare but potentially fatal complication seen after rapid reexpansion of the collapsed lung following thoracentesis of pleural fluid or tube drainage of pneumothorax. This condition, which manifests with various degrees of clinical severity, is rarely reported following liver transplantation. Herein, we present a 62-year-old male patient who developed reexpansion pulmonary edema after drainage of massive pleural effusion, which caused a total collapse in the right hemithorax during liver transplant. Six hours after pleural fluid drainage, the patient developed a nonproductive cough, mild tachypnea, shortness of breath, and low oxygen saturation (88%). His chest radiograph showed diffuse heterogeneous opacities in the right hemithorax. Computed tomography of the thorax revealed consolidations containing air bronchograms and ground glass opacities in the parenchyma of the right lung; these findings did not extend to the periphery and were observed less frequently in the inferoposterior left lung. These symptoms and radiologic findings were diagnosed as reexpansion pulmonary edema. Complete clinical and radiologic improvements were achieved within 72 hours of mechanical ventilatory support.