Somatostatin and Propranolol to Treat Small-for-Size Syndrome that Occurred Despite Splenic Artery Ligation
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Date
2007-12
Journal Title
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Publisher
Başkent Üniversitesi
Abstract
We report our success with somatostatin and propranolol to treat small-for-size syndrome that occurred despite splenic artery ligation. A 48-year-old woman with cirrhosis due to autoimmune hepatitis underwent living-donor liver transplant; her graft-to-body weight ratio of the right lobe was 0.91%. After arterial reperfusion, portal pressure and flow were 24 cm H20 and 2.22 L/min (ie, 360 mL/100g graft/min), respectively. Following splenic artery ligation, the portal pressure decreased to 16 cm H20 and portal flow to 1.74 L/min (ie, 282 mL/100g graft/min). On the second postoperative day, small-for-size syndrome was diagnosed based on the marked prolongation of prothrombin time (international normalized ratio, 4.4), hyperbilirubinemia (359.1 micromol/L), rapid escalation of transaminases (alanine aminotransferase 2488 U/L, aspartate aminotransferase 1075 U/L) and very high portal flow rate (> 90 cm/sec). Oral propranolol (40 mg/day b.i.d.) and somatostatin infusion (250-µg bolus followed by perfusion at a rate of 250 µg/h for 5 days) were started. Prothrombin time and transaminase levels began to decrease the following day, although the bilirubin level increased to 495.9 µmol/L before returning to normal. The patient was discharged in excellent health 5 weeks after surgery. Despite reduction of portal pressure by splenic artery ligation, small-for-size syndrome may develop in patients with persistent high portal flow. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of the successful treatment of small-for-size syndrome by somatostatin and propranolol in the clinical setting.
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Keywords
Liver transplant, Living donor, Somatotropin release-inhibiting factor
Citation
Experimental and Clinical Transplantation, Cilt 5, Sayı 2, 2007, ss. 686-689