| Literature DB >> 1735354 |
R Hickman1, M Bracher, M Tyler, Z Lotz, J Fourie.
Abstract
It has been suggested recently that patients with fulminant liver failure should be prepared for transplantation by early hepatectomy, yet the acute effects of removal of the liver upon the coagulation profile and certain hormones are not known. This study was conducted on totally hepatectomized pigs that survived up to 27 hr. Measurements were made of serum insulin, plasma glucagon (IRG and GLI), glucose, catecholamines, and the coagulation profile. The increase in serum insulin was directly related to levels of plasma glucose--there was a 100-fold increase in animals with plasma glucose levels greater than 400 mg/100 ml and none when blood glucose was less than 100 mg/100 ml. Plasma glucagon showed a sharp transient increase within 1 hr of hepatectomy and a slow rise thereafter with levels apparently unrelated to serum insulin or plasma glucose. There was a transient increase in plasma adrenaline but a sharp continuous increase in plasma norepinephrine. No changes of note occurred in the coagulation profile--even levels of fibrinogen only declined by 20% in 27 hr. The study has shown that early total hepatectomy is safe as far as changes in coagulation are concerned but changes in serum insulin and especially plasma norepinephrine may be of more significance.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1992 PMID: 1735354 DOI: 10.1007/bf01307723
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dig Dis Sci ISSN: 0163-2116 Impact factor: 3.199