Nutritional status was investigated in 10 patients who had previously undergone total gastrectomy without evidence of malignancy. The ability of these patients to ingest and absorb adequate amounts of nutrients was examined. Metabolic balance studies were also performed to discover how effectively these patients could accumulate and use the absorbed nutrients. In the controlled hospital situation, the amount of food ingested was greater than the amount required for maintenance of Ideal Body Weight. Although mild malabsorption of fat and nitrogen was documented, weight gain and positive nitrogen balance occurred. In direct contrast, food intake significantly decreased when the patients returned to their home environment. While severe malabsorption may contribute to malnutrition in the individual patient, the most common mechanism responsible for postoperative malnutrition was inadequate intake. In the occasional patient with severe malabsorption, the universal demonstration of jejunal anaerobic bacterial overgrowth offers important therapeutic implications. The relative importance of pancreatico-biliary insufficiency in promoting malabsorption remains to be determined. Construction of a Hunt-Lawrence jejunal pouch was not found to favorably affect caloric intake, weight gain, degree of malabsorption, or dumping symptoms. Although some degree of malnutrition does result from total gastric resection, in most cases it is mild and potentially correctable. Avoidance of indicated total gastrectomy due to fears of progressive postoperative malnutrition is unwarranted.
Orthotopic liver transplantation may be associated during the postoperative period with hepatic artery thrombosis, a catastrophic occurrence generally necessitating emergency retransplantation. To assess the contribution of the coagulation mechanism to this complication, the levels of procoagulant and anticoagulant proteins were followed in 41 liver transplant patients during the first 10 postoperative days. The mean activities of all procoagulant factors reach normal values on day 1 except for factors V and VII, which achieve normal activity by day 3. Supernormal levels of factor VIII activity and antigen are noted (peak values on day 5 of 334% +/- 113% and 481% +/- 260%, respectively). The anticoagulant proteins show delayed recovery, with deficient antithrombin III levels seen in 81% of patients on day 3 and 57% on day 5. Similarly, proteins C and S are subnormal in 24% and 21%, respectively on day 3, and 20% and 10%, respectively, on day 5. During this period, elevated levels of thrombin/antithrombin complexes are encountered, reflecting in vivo activation of the coagulation mechanism. Activated thrombin is, therefore, being generated at a time when a decrease in the major regulatory anticoagulant proteins exists. These data suggest an imbalance between the hemostatic and thrombotic mechanisms and indicate a sustained prothrombotic state that may contribute to the risk for hepatic artery thrombosis. Using a regimen of low-dose heparin and fresh frozen plasma infusion, no thromboses have been seen in 65 consecutive liver transplants.
To obtain information on the prevalence and clinical and laboratory correlates of osteopenia in patients with chronic liver disease, we measured bone densities and 30 selected laboratory variables in 133 subjects (70 men, 63 women) with liver disease. Thirty-two had alcoholic liver disease, 18 had primary biliary cirrhosis, 16 had primary sclerosing cholangitis, 48 had other forms of cirrhosis (cryptogenic, posthepatic) and 19 had chronic hepatitis or fibrosis without cirrhosis. Bone densities of the lumbar spine and three sites of the proximal femur (neck, Ward's triangle, greater trochanter) were estimated by dual-photon absorptiometry. Bone densities at all sites were significantly correlated to one another (r = 0.4 to 0.9; 95% confidence intervals = 0.24-0.54 to 0.81-0.90; p less than 0.0001 for all). Compared with an age- and gender-matched reference group, patients with liver disease had highly significant decreases in bone densities (greater than 2 standard deviations below control values; p less than 0.0008 at all sites). Decreases were particularly marked (24% to 42%) at Ward's triangle, the site of the femoral neck particularly prone to fracture. The prevalence of decreased bone densities ranged from 10% to 56%, depending on the site studied and the nature of the liver disease. Among 30 laboratory variables studied, there were significant (p less than 0.05) correlations with bone densities at more than one site for urinary creatinine (r = 0.21, 0.25), urinary calcium (r = -0.18, -0.23), serum total alkaline phosphatase (r = -0.18, -0.27) and the liver-1 isozyme of serum alkaline phosphatase (r = -0.19, -0.26).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
This paper reports the preliminary results of a prospective randomized trial comparing endoscopic variceal sclerosis and distal splenorenal shunt (DSRS) in the management of patients with cirrhosis and variceal bleeding. Seventy-one patients have been entered; 36 have received sclerosis and 35 DSRS. Randomization of the study population was stratified on Child's A/B (56%) and Child's C (44%). Sixty-one per cent had alcoholic and 39% non-alcoholic cirrhosis. No patients have been lost to follow-up, which currently stands at a median of 26 months. Rebleeding occurred significantly (p less than 0.05) more frequently in patients in the sclerosis group (19 of 36: 53%) compared to DSRS (1 of 35: 3%), but only 11 of 36 (31%) were not controlled by further sclerosis and failed that therapy. Patients in whom sclerosis failed underwent surgery. Survival was significantly (p less than 0.01) improved in the sclerosis group (+ surgery in 31%), with an 84% 2-year survival compared to a 59% 2-year survival in the DSRS group. Portal perfusion was significantly (p less than 0.05) better maintained in the sclerosis (95%) compared to the DSRS (53%) group. Galactose elimination capacity improved significantly (p less than 0.05) in 21 patients successfully managed by sclerosis at 1 year and was significantly (p less than 0.01) better maintained in the sclerosis compared to DSRS group. The authors conclude that endoscopic sclerosis: has a higher rebleeding rate than DSRS, with one third of patients failing therapy from rebleeding; allows significant improvement in liver function when successful; and gives significantly improved survival in the management of variceal bleeding when backed up by surgical therapy for patients with uncontrolled rebleeding.
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