The early postoperative period remains a high-risk phase for relaparotomy. The selection of recipients before initiation of long-term dialysis and of donors deceased from traumatic causes may reduce the rate of these early complications after SPKT. Vascular graft thrombosis and bleeding are two major issues that arise during this critical period, suggesting the importance an adequate management of postoperative anticoagulation and hemostasis.
Background and study aims Endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) of superficial colorectal lesions in close proximity to the appendiceal orifice (L-PAO) was shown to be feasible except in case of deep invasion into the appendix (type 3 of Toyonaga’s classification). This study aimed to determine the outcomes of ESD with double clip and rubber band traction (DCT-ESD) of L-PAO including a majority of type 3.
Patients and methods We reviewed retrospectively all consecutive DCT-ESD of L-PAO performed in 3 French centers. Each lesion was described according to Toyonaga’s classification and type 0 lesions were excluded. The primary outcome was en bloc and R0 resection rates for L-PAO. Morbidity and salvage surgery were recorded.
Results A total of 32 patients underwent DCT-ESD; 22 lesions (68.8 %) were type 3, including 11 with previous appendectomy (34.4 %). Median lesion size was 35 mm range (10–110 mm) and median duration of resection was 47 min range (10–230 min). We achieved 100 % of En bloc resection exclusively with DCT-ESD and 90.6 % of histological R0 resection rate. Per-procedure, 11 perforations occurred and were all immediately closed with clips. Overall, 3 patients (10.7 %) underwent surgery without stoma (2 complications related and 1 incomplete resection). No death occurred.
Conclusion ESD of lesions deeply invading appendiceal orifice is feasible with the help of a traction system. Technical success by endoscopy avoiding surgery was achieved in 90.6 % of cases.
Our results support that improved surgical techniques and careful patient selection can lead to a safe use of left livers for transplantation in adult recipients. Inflow modulation could be performed in very selected cases.
Pancreas retransplantation is a safe procedure with acceptable graft survival that should be proposed to diabetic patients who have lost their primary graft.
Coupled plasma filtration adsorption (CPFA) is a blood purification therapy aimed at modulating the host inflammatory response involved in sepsis pathogenesis. One potential drawback of this technique is the unexpected elimination of antibiotics. The aim of this study was to assess the elimination of several antibiotics with CPFA. We performed a retrospective analysis of the serum and ultrafiltrate concentrations of different antibiotics routinely measured during CPFA sessions in five patients experiencing septic shock. The adsorbent extraction ratio (AER) for piperacillin and vancomycin 2 h into the CPFA session were high: 95.4 ± 6.9% and 99.6 ± 0.9%, respectively. These AER decreased significantly by 8 h (at 8 h: 6.3 ± 51.8% and -30.2 ± 25.6%, respectively), suggesting saturation of the resin cartridge. Conversely, the tazobactam AER was low (7.2 ± 15% after 2 h of CPFA). No significant changes in the mean serum concentrations of piperacillin, tazobactam, and vancomycin were observed. Thus, as opposed to tazobactam, we report high adsorption of piperacillin and vancomycin on the CPFA resin but with no reduction in serum concentrations.
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