Popis: |
Reported studies more than forty years ago established that all surgery patients exhibit a marked postoperative hypocitricemia within one day following surgery and persists for seven days and longer. Animals also exhibit the postoperative hypocitricemia. The hypocitricemia results from increased liver clearance of plasma citrate, in which the hepatocytes become capable of transporting and utilizing citrate from plasma. This represents a physiologic/metabolic response during the patient recovery from surgery. The extensive hypocitricemia in response to surgery is not manifested by known citricemic hormones, but is initiated via an unidentified putative endocrine hypocitricemic hormone. In addition to the importance relating to surgery patients, the surgical hypocitricemic effects, along with the liver and hepatic cell effects, will impact virtually all human and animal clinical and experimental studies that include surgical intervention; including the conclusions and translational clinical implications. Unfortunately, the hypocitricemic response to surgery has been ignored for the past forty years, and most contemporary clinicians and biomedical investigators are not aware of this clinical relationship. The intent of this review is to inform members of the medical community of the established hypocitricemic response to surgery and the important role of liver clearance and hepatocyte metabolism of plasma citrate; which, hopefully, will generate interest and research that should be integrated into contemporary issues that involve surgical intervention. |