Perioperative assessment of terlipressin infusion during living donor liver transplantation

S H Hong, J M Lee, J H Choi, H S Chung, J H Park, C S Park, S H Hong, J M Lee, J H Choi, H S Chung, J H Park, C S Park

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the safety and efficacy of infusion of terlipressin during living donor liver transplantation (LDLT).

Methods: Patients undergoing LDLT with low systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI) and pulmonary vascular resistance index (PVRI) (n=41) were randomly allocated into control (n=20) and terlipressin groups (n=21). Terlipressin was infused at 1.0-4.0 μg/kg per h in the terlipressin group during surgery. Controls received generally accepted inotropic and vasopressor agents.

Results: Terlipressin infusion induced significantly higher SVRI and PVRI at 60 min after drug infusion, produced significantly greater hourly urine output during the anhepatic phase, and was related to significantly shorter stays in the postoperative intensive care unit (ICU) compared with control treatment (mean±SD ICU stay 5.7±1.5 versus 6.9±1.5 days, respectively). Patients given a terlipressin infusion>2.0 μg/kg per h during the preanhepatic phase had a median ICU stay of <6 days (sensitivity 90.0%; specificity 89.0%).

Conclusions: Terlipressin infusion improved low SVRI and PVRI during LDLT and may have contributed to better renal function and shorter ICU stays.

Source: PubMed

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