TIPS is a percutaneous procedure which diverts blood from the portal to the systemic circulation preventing rebleeding from varices and stopping or reducing the formation of ascites. The choice of the anaesthetic technique is still a matter of debate. Since January 2003, 150 consecutive TIPS were performed using total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA), (propofol/fentanyl or remifentanil), endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation. Sixty-one patients were classified as ASA 2, 73 ASA 3, and 16 ASA 4. According to CHILD classification, 96 patients were in Class A, 48 in Class B, 6 in Class C. Mean duration f the procedure was 100+/-62 min. After TIPS placement Portal vein pressure decreased from 30+/-10 to 14+/-4 mmHg while RAP increased from 8+/-4 to 12+/-6 mmHg. Intraoperative fluid management included mainly crystalloids (750+/-200 ml, 5.4+/-1.5 ml/kg/h). Fresh frozen plasma (median 2 units, range 1-3) was given in 20 patients (13%) if PT INR was >2. Packed red cells (median 2 units, range 1-5) were transfused in 35 patients (23%) to keep haematocrit >25%; platelets were administered before the procedure if platelet count was <50,000x10(-9) (20 patients, 13%). Urine output was kept above 4 ml/kg/h with loops diuretics (mean diuresis 700+/-200 ml, 5+/-1.5 ml/kg/h). Ten patients (6.6%) required ICU after the procedure, because of intraoperative hemodynamic instability. Three patients (2%) died in the early postoperative period because of multiple organ failure associated with the acute deterioration of an already marginal hepatic function.
Atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) is a 28 amino acid peptide secreted by the atrial cardiocytes. Clearance is via the lung (50%) and the liver (25%). The main stimulus to ANF secretion is atrial distension but vasoconstrictors, sympathetic stimulation, catecolamines and tachycardia are able to enhance its circulating blood levels. ANF blood concentrations were measured during orthotopic liver transplantation in six postnecrotic cirrhotic patients. Significant increases in ANF blood levels occurred at the end of the anhepatic phase (P < or = 0.02 vs baseline) associated with low cardiac filling pressures (P < or = 0.02 vs baseline) and increased systemic vascular resistances (P < or = 0.02 vs preanhepatic phase). Aldosterone blood levels showed a similar behaviour, increasing significantly (P > or = 0.001 vs baseline) at the end of the anhepatic phase. ANF fell after reperfusion of the graft and returned towards baseline values at the end of the procedure. Since most of the total body clearance of ANF is performed by the lungs, its sharp increase at the end of the anhepatic phase could be considered a counterregulatory response to vasoconstricting stimulation and to fluid-sparing mechanisms in the presence of relative hypovolaemia. Its decrease after reperfusion could be related to volume normalization and partly to the enhanced clearance performed by the newly grafted liver.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.