[Liver transplantation in children. Blood transfusion and metabolic disorders]

Autor: P M, Dyer, Y G, Blanloeil, J V, Farman
Jazyk: francouzština
Rok vydání: 1987
Předmět:
Zdroj: Annales francaises d'anesthesie et de reanimation. 6(3)
ISSN: 0750-7658
Popis: Metabolic disorders during hepatic transplantation can be partly induced by blood transfusion. A retrospective survey of perioperative biological data recorded in patients under 18 years of age having liver transplantation was performed. Blood transfusion was also studied. For this evaluation, patients were divided in a paediatric group I (n = 20; mean age: 3.7 years) and an adolescent group II (n = 11; mean age: 14.3 years). Blood transfusion was significantly (p less than 0.05) more important in group I (302 +/- 286 ml X kg-1) than in group II (148.5 +/- 156 ml X kg-1). Autotransfusion of washed red cells was performed in six patients, allowing a mean 17 +/- 7% saving in blood transfusion. Severe hypernatraemia over 152 mmol X l-1 due to blood transfusion was observed only in five patients in group I. Hyperglycaemia increasing till the revascularization of the new liver was constant in both groups, but significantly more pronounced in group II. Cardiac arrest occurred twice in group I at initial revascularization. In group I, children with biliary atresia were not significantly different from the others for the duration of operation and the volume of blood transfusion; however the latter was more abundant. Conversely, in group II, the duration of operation was longer (p less than 0.05) in patients with previous abdominal surgery than in others. Finally the paediatric group differs from the adolescent group by obvious differences in anaesthesia and intensive care and specifically in hepatic transplantation by larger volume of blood transfusion leading to severe hypernatraemia. In further studies, adolescents should be distinct from the paediatric group and included in the adult group.
Databáze: OpenAIRE