[Abstract] [Full Text PDF] (in Japanese / 1743KB) [Members Only And Two Factor Auth.]

J.Jpn. Surg. Soc.. 98(8): 667-670, 1997


Feature topic

THORACIC SURGERY AND LIVER DYSFUNCTION

Department of Thoracic Surgery, Institute of Development, Aging and Cancer, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan

Sadafumi Ono, Tatsuo Tanita, Satoshi Suzuki, Shigefumi Fujimura

Lung resection results in loss of lung parenchyma including residual healthy lung tissue and in reduction in pulmonary vascular bed. A decrease in residual pulmonary vascular bed after lung resection causes an increase in right heart afterload, and in some patients, it would be associated with an increase in right heart preload and consequent the changes in hepatic circulation which would lead to liver damage. Preceding thoracotomy, unilateral pulmonary arterial occlusion test (UPAO) was performed to simulate the hemodynamic changes after lung resection to evaluate the increase in right heart preload after surgery. Patients with the decreases in cardiac index or PaO2 during UPAO showed a higher levels of GPT during postoperative period when compared with those with the increase in either parameters. In a surgical treatment for empyema, bronchiectasis, or other infectious lung diseases, bronchial angiography (BAG) and also bronchial arterial embolization (BAE) were useful methods to prevent from exceeding bleeding during thoracotomy, which is one of the risk factors to cause liver damage after surgery. These results suggest that, in the field of thoracic surgery, the preoperative assessment of the hemodynamic changes caused by lung resection and the preoperative attempt to prevent from bleeding during thoracotomy are both important to protect from liver damage caused by surgical stress.


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