| Literature DB >> 22690040 |
Aliki Tympa1, Kassiani Theodoraki, Athanassia Tsaroucha, Nikolaos Arkadopoulos, Ioannis Vassiliou, Vassilios Smyrniotis.
Abstract
Background. Hazards of liver surgery have been attenuated by the evolution in methods of hepatic vascular control and the anesthetic management. In this paper, the anesthetic considerations during hepatic vascular occlusion techniques were reviewed. Methods. A Medline literature search using the terms "anesthetic," "anesthesia," "liver," "hepatectomy," "inflow," "outflow occlusion," "Pringle," "hemodynamic," "air embolism," "blood loss," "transfusion," "ischemia-reperfusion," "preconditioning," was performed. Results. Task-orientated anesthetic management, according to the performed method of hepatic vascular occlusion, ameliorates the surgical outcome and improves the morbidity and mortality rates, following liver surgery. Conclusions. Hepatic vascular occlusion techniques share common anesthetic considerations in terms of preoperative assessment, monitoring, induction, and maintenance of anesthesia. On the other hand, the hemodynamic management, the prevention of vascular air embolism, blood transfusion, and liver injury are plausible when the anesthetic plan is scheduled according to the method of hepatic vascular occlusion performed.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22690040 PMCID: PMC3368350 DOI: 10.1155/2012/720754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HPB Surg ISSN: 0894-8569
Hemodynamic changes on clinical series of hepatectomies induced by hepatic vascular occlusion techniques.
| Technique | Haemodynamic changes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heart rate | Mean arterial blood pressure | Cardiac index | ||
| Inflow and outflow occlusion | THVE* | |||
| Redai et al.a [ | ↑ 25% | ↓ 17,64% | ↓ 50% | |
| Smyrniotis et al.a [ | ↑ 21% | ↓ 23% | ↓ 50% | |
| Figueras et al.a [ | ↑ 18,75% | ↓ 20,48% | ↓ 60% | |
| Smyrniotis et al. [ | ↑ 29% | ↑ 22% | ↓ 50% | |
| SHVE** | ||||
| Figueras et al.a [ | ↑ 2,46% | ↑ 3,79% | N/A | |
| Smyrniotis et al. [ | ↑ 5% | ↑ 5,55% | ↓ 10% | |
|
| ||||
| Inflow occlusion | Pringle | |||
| Redai et al.a [ | ↑ 6.25% | ↑ 15% | ↓ 10% | |
| Smyrniotis et al.a [ | ↑ 12% | ↑ 16% | ↓ 10% | |
| Figueras et al.a [ | ↑ 8.83% | ↑ 13.85% | N/A | |
aValues expressing % change of heart rate, mean arterial blood pressure, and cardiac index during clamping and uclamping of hepatic vessels.
*THVE: total hepatic vascular exclusion.
**SHVE: selective hepatic vascular exclusion.
↑: increase.
↓: reduction.
Clinical series of hepatectomies performed under vascular occlusion techniques.
| Technique-study | No. of patients | Type of hepatectomya | Clamp time (min) | Morbidity/mortality (%) | Transfusions (%) | CVP (mmHg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I.Pb | ||||||
| Torzilli et al. [ | 329 | Major 71% | 69 | 26/0 | 3.9 | N/A |
| Nuzzo et al. [ | 120 | Major 38% | 39 | N/A | 60 | <5 |
| Omar Giovanardi et al. [ | 72 | Major 81% | N/A | 24/7 | 57 | N/A |
| THVEc | ||||||
| Smyrniotis et al. [ | 18 | Major | 32 | 33/0 | 30 | N/A |
| Figueras et al. [ | 39 | N/A | 41 | N/A | 4 | 6.4 |
| SHVEd | ||||||
| Smyrniotis et al. [ | 20 | Major | 38 | 25/0 | 15 | <5 |
| Zhou et al. [ | 125 | N/A | 21.7 | 39.2/0 | 32 | 4.4 |
| Fu et al. [ | 246 | Major | N/A | 24.8/0 | 24 | 2–5 |
| Figueras et al. [ | 41 | N/A | 47 | N/A | 6 | 7.2 |
| Pringle-IPMe | ||||||
| Wang et al. [ | 114 | N/A | N/A | N/A | 13.1 | 5–10 |
| Zhou et al. [ | 110 | N/A | 22.5 | 51.8/1.8 | 80.9 | 4.6 |
| Ishizaki et al. [ | 380 | Major 39.4% | 62 | 23.9/0 | 34 | N/A |
aMajor hepatectomy is defined as resection of more than two segments according to Couinaud's classification.
bI.P: ischemic preconditioning.
cTHVE: total hepatic vascular exclusion.
dSHVE: selective hepatic vascular exclusion.
eIPM: intermittent pringle maneuver.