Başkent Üniversitesi Yayınları
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Item Postoperative Impact of Intraoperative Biochemical Changes at the Completion of Parenchymal Division in Living-Donor Liver Transplantat(Başkent Üniversitesi, 2006-12) Jain, Ashok; Orloff, Mark; Abt, Peter; Kashyap, Randeep; Mantry, Parvez; Bozorgzadeh, AdelObjectives: Biochemical abnormalities after living-donor hepatectomy are attributed to the loss of liver volume and steatosis or fibrosis. In this study, we evaluated the intraoperative biochemical changes caused by the separation of the hepatic lobes before removal and the impact of those changes on postoperative biochemical abnormalities in patients who underwent adult-to-adult living-donor liver transplantation (LDLT). Materials and Methods: The extent and postoperative impact of the biochemical changes that occur during hepatic parenchymal transection in adult-to-adult LDLT were studied in 38 patients who underwent that procedure (14 men and 24 women; mean age, 39.6 years; age range, 19.5-58.9 years). Preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative biochemical values for the first 8 postoperative days were compared. Results: The mean total hepatic volume was 1703.0 mL, the mean weight of the resected mass was 887.0 g (52.6%), and the mean weight of the residual mass was 816.0 g (47.4%). The mean total bilirubin, aspartate amino transferase (AST), and amino alanine transferase (ALT) values were 8.6 U/L, 21.4 U/L, and 27.6 U/L, respectively, before surgery, compared with 27.4 U/L (an increase of 3.2 times), 257.9.2 U/L (an increase of 12.0 times), and 224.64 U/L (an increase of 8.1 times), respectively, after separation of the hepatic lobes. Patients (n = 21) with an intraoperative ALT value of >= 200 had a significantly higher peak postoperative ALT (P = .001) than did those (n = 17) with an ALT value of < 200. Conclusions: A significant increase in hepatic biochemical parameters occurs at the completion of hepatic parenchymal transection and before the removal of the right hepatic lobe from the donor. This has an impact on postoperative peak enzyme levels in the donor.Item HCV Antibody Quantitative Levels in Liver Transplant Patients: Do They Have Any Relevance in Clinical Practice?(Başkent Üniversitesi, 2006-06) Jain, Ashok; Menegus, Marilyn; Mohanka, Ravi; Orloff, Mark; Abt, Peter; Mantry, Parvez; Bozorgzadeh, AdelObjectives: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is not directly cytopathic to the hepatocytes; however, host immune response against the virus does cause hepatic injury. Production of the HCV antibody is a host immune response to a viral antigen. The currently used HCV antibody assay is a qualitative, not quantitative, assessment. In this study, we sought to quantitatively estimate HCV antibody levels in patients who had undergone liver transplantations at the University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York, and correlate these levels with HCV RNA viral load, genotype, severity of recurrence, and anti-HCV treatment. Materials and Methods: From 39 liver transplantation patients, we obtained 141 blood samples for quantitative HCV RNA to measure HCV antibody levels quantitatively. Results: Most antibody levels were within a narrow range with a mean of 32.9 ± 5.1. Samples with undetectable RNA had a mean antibody level of 31.4 ± 8.0, and samples with a positive RNA had mean level of 33.0 ± 4.6. The mean antibody levels were significantly higher for patients with genotype 1 (n = 33) compared with those with genotype 2 (n = 5) (33.2 vs 29.1; P = .007). No correlation was found between antibody levels and severity of hepatic injury with regard to hepatitis activity index or fibrosis score. Six patients with no response to anti-HCV treatment had no change in their mean antibody levels (33.7 vs 34.5). Ten patients who responded to anti-HCV therapy had lower mean levels after therapy, but the changes were not significant (34.2 vs 30.4). Conclusions: Antibody levels in this study did not correlate with viral load or hepatic injury. However, genotype-2 patients had significantly lower levels compared with genotype-1 patients, and patients who responded to anti-HCV therapy demonstrated decreased antibody levels.