Somatostatin and propranolol to treat small-for-size syndrome that occurred despite splenic artery ligation
Date
2007Author
Kara, Melih
Salmaslioglu, Artur
Bilge, Orhan
Kaymakoglu, Sabahattin
Oezden, Ilgin
Pinarbasi, Binnur
Alper, Aydin
Yavru, Aysen
Emre, Ali
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
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-tobody weight ratio of the right lobe was 0.91%. After arterial reperfusion, portal pressure and flow were 24 cm H2O and 2.22 L/min (ie, 360 mL/100g graft/min), respectively. Following splenic artery ligation, the portal pressure decreased to 16 cm H2O 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-mu g bolus followed by perfusion at a rate of 250 pg/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 mu mol/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.
Collections
- Makale [92796]