Although patients with hypospadias had a slightly higher rate of dissatisfaction with penile size, their sexual behavior was not different from that in control subjects.
The size of segmental liver grafts assessed by preoperative computed tomography (CT) volumetry was evaluated in relation to surgical outcome in 14 living related partial liver transplantations (LRLTs). The aim was to show that graft size can be accurately assessed before operation and to estimate the lower safety limit of graft size in assessing subsequent graft function and survival. The relationship between calculated CT volume and weight of the liver was linear in the recipient (r = 0.97) and donor (r = 0.98). The mean(s.e.m.) modified liver weight ratio (MLWR; ratio of graft weight to recipient's expected liver weight based on body-weight) was 0.59(0.07) (range 0.27-1.09). Surgical complications related to an oversized graft and primary graft failure caused by a small-for-size graft were not observed. The lowest MLWR of any survivor was 0.27. These results suggest that a partial liver graft reduced to about 30 per cent of the recipient's expected liver weight can tolerate LRLT well.
PFR improved several clinical symptoms of patients after ISR. Compared with patients after LAR, patients after ISR showed an insufficient response to PFR in improving fecal incontinence. Considering the result of the generalized assessment of the quality of life scale, PFR may offer a therapeutic effect for several symptoms of patients after ISR.
The influence of graft size-matching on tissue oxygenation and metabolic capability was studied in living related partial liver transplantations for 47 pediatric patients. Their age ranged from 4 months to 17 years 3 months, their body weight from 4.0 to 58.0 kg, graft weight from 191 to 440 g, and graft weight/recipient body weight ratio from 0.61% to 6.0%. Tissue oxygenation and its heterogeneity were investigated by measuring oxygen saturation of hemoglobin in the liver sinusoid (SO2), coefficient of variation of SO2, and arterial ketone body ratio. The metabolic capacity of the graft was investigated by measuring bilirubin clearance, recovery of cholesterol esterification, and ketone body production. In infants with a relatively large liver graft, both intra- and extracellular oxygenation remained low soon after reperfusion but recovered to the control value by the end of the operation. In adolescent recipients of a relatively small graft, by contrast, synthetic and detoxification capacities were relatively deficient; however, these improved with time. These results indicate that sufficient tissue oxygenation and liver regeneration are essential for successful liver transplantation with relatively large and small grafts, respectively.
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.