Liver transplantation in infants weighing under 7 kilograms: management and outcome of PICU |
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Authors: | Iglesias Juan López Jesús A Ortega Juan Roqueta Jorge Asensio Marino Margarit Carlos |
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Affiliation: | Pediatric ICU Service, Hospital Vall d'Hebron, Passeig Vall d'Hebron, Barcelona, Spain. joiglesias@vhebron.net |
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Abstract: | Liver transplantation (LT) is an established treatment for children with acute and chronic liver failure. Some reports suggest that infants under the age of 1 yr and children weighing under 13 kg are high-risk groups associated with less satisfactory results. This report describes our experience during the pediatric intensive care unit stay of 16 infants weighing <7 kg who received LT. We reviewed the records of 16 infants with median age 7.4 months and median weight 5.8 kg, who received 18 liver allografts, nine whole and nine reduced. We also reviewed the use of adrenergic agonist agents, anti-infectious agents, antihypertensive agents, diuretics, immunosuppression protocol, sedation-analgesia agents, others agents (prostaglandin E(1), heparin and dipyridamole), diagnosis and management of rejection episodes, follow-up examination, nutrition and outcome. Mean peri-operative blood transfusions were 204 mL/kg, 188 mL/kg of plasma and 36 mL/kg of platelets; mean operative time was 5 h. Primary abdominal wound closure was possible in nine patients. Median initial intensive care unit stay was 18 days. Reasons for an initial stay of more than 18 days were retransplantation (1), gastrointestinal bleeding (2), paralytic ileus and atelectasis (2), septic shock (2), diaphragmatic paralysis, renal impairment and acute respiratory distress syndrome (2). Mean requirement for artificial ventilation was 168 h. Mean use of dobutamine, prostaglandin E(1) and dopamine was 3.3, 7.5 and 8.8 days, respectively. Parenteral nutrition was started at a mean of 48 h and oral food intake was started at a mean of 72 h. The most frequent complications were infection, atelectasis, gastrointestinal bleeding, acute renal failure and hepatic artery thrombosis. Four children required six re-explorations and two received retransplantation. Mean overall survival rate was 82% and graft survival was 72%. Weight alone (under 7 kg) should not be considered as a contraindication for LT. The survival rate of children post-LT is excellent regardless of graft type. |
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Keywords: | liver transplantation infants management outcome |
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