UNTIL last year, the kidney was the only organ which had been transplanted with subsequent significant prolongation of life. There had been nine reported attempts at orthotopic liver transplantation; seven in Denver 2 2 + 2 3 and one each in Bostonle and P a r i~.~ Two of these patients had succumbed within a few hours after operat i~n ,~, 22 and none had lived for longer than 23 days.This dismal picture has changed within the last 9 months, inasmuch as seven consecutive patients treated with orthotopic liver transplantation from July 23, 1967 to March 17, 1968 all passed through this previously lethal operative and postoperative period. Three of the recipients are still alive after 9, 23$, and 1 months; the others died after 2, 3%, 454, and 6 months. MethodsThe Recipients. Summary information for the seven patients is given in Table 1. Their ages were 13 months to 16 years. Six were females. The indications for transplantation, which had been established by earlier explorations at other hospitals, were
Summary and conclusionsA randomly selected group of 331 children who had started to wheeze in childhood and a control group of 77 children were prospectively studied clinically and physiologically from 7 to 21 years of age. Most subjects improved during adolescence and about 55% of those whose wheezing had started before 7 years and stopped before adolescence remained wheeze free. Forty-five per cent of subjects who had apparently ceased to wheeze at 14 years had minor recurrences of wheezing between 14 and 21 years of age. Fewer than 20% of those with persistent symptoms in childhood had become totally wheeze free during adolescence, although there was amelioration in symptoms.Girls did less well during adolescence than boys, so that there was no longer an increased preponderance of boys with increasing severity of asthma. Normal growth was achieved in all grades despite the persistence of symptoms in many cases. At 21 years of age features of airways obstruction were often found during an interval phase, especially in those who had more persistent symptoms.
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) has been associated with reduced neurocognitive performance in children, but the underlying etiology is unclear. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between hypoxemia, respiratory arousals, and neurocognitive performance in snoring children referred for adenotonsillectomy. Thirteen snoring children who were referred for evaluation regarding the need for adenotonsillectomy to a children's hospital otolaryngology/respiratory department underwent detailed neurocognitive and polysomnographic (PSG) evaluation. PSGs were evaluated for respiratory abnormalities and compared with 13 nonsnoring control children of similar age who were studied in the same manner. The snoring children had an obstructive respiratory disturbance index within normal range (mean obstructive apnea/hypopnea index, 0.6/hr). Despite this, several domains of neurocognitive function were reduced in the snoring group. These included mean verbal IQ scores (snorers 92.6 vs. nonsnorers 110.2, P < 0.001), mean global IQ scores (snorers 96.7 vs. nonsnorers 110.2, P < 0.005), mean selective attention scores (snorers 46.4 vs. nonsnorers 11.8, P < 0.001), mean sustained attention scores (snorers 8.0 vs. nonsnorers 2.2, P = 0.001), and mean memory index (snorers 95.2 vs. nonsnorers 112.1, P = 0.001). There was a direct relationship between number of mild oxygen desaturations of > or = 3%, obstructive hypopneas with > or = 3% oxygen desaturations, and respiratory arousals and severity of neurocognitive deficits, with the greatest effect being on memory scores. The disruption of sleep in snoring children produced by relatively mild changes in oxygen saturation or by increases in respiratory arousals may have a greater effect on neurocognitive function than hitherto appreciated. A possible explanation for these neurocognitive deficits may be the combination of the chronicity of sleep disruption secondary to snoring which is occurring at a time of rapid neurological development in the first decade of life. Future studies need to confirm the reversal of these relatively mild neurocognitive decrements post adenotonsillectomy.
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