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Effects of Short-Term Normothermic and Subnormothermic Perfusion After Cold Preservation on Liver Transplantation From Donors After Cardiac Death

Authors :
Keisei Fujimori
Shigehito Miyagi
Hideaki Sasajima
Kazuhiro Mitsui
Masafumi Goto
Yuta Kakizaki
Shuhei Yamada
Yasuyuki Hara
Takashi Kamei
Michiaki Unno
Source :
Transplantation proceedings. 52(6)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Liver transplantation from donors after cardiac death (DCD) could increase the pool of organs. We previously reported that oxygenated subnormothermic (20°C-25°C) ex vivo liver perfusion (SELP) improved the graft viability in rats. This study aimed to compare the effectiveness of SELP and normothermic (37°C) ex vivo liver perfusion (NELP) after cold storage (CS) in DCD liver grafts. Methods Male Wistar rats were used, and grafts were retrieved 30 minutes after cardiac arrest. We performed oxygenated NELP and SELP with a Krebs-Henseleit buffer for different time points and durations: Group 0, donation performed from heart-beating donors (control); Group 1 (DCD group), donation performed from DCD donors with no treatments; Group 2, NELP performed before CS (30 minutes); Group 3, NELP performed after CS (30 minutes); Group 4, SELP performed after CS (30 minutes); Group 5, SELP performed after CS (60 minutes); and Group 6, SELP performed after CS (90 minutes). After 15 minutes of incubation at room temperature, the grafts were reperfused under normothermic conditions for 60 minutes as a model of liver transplantation. Results No significant differences in body and liver weight were observed between all groups. In the SELP after CS groups, even 30 minutes of perfusion improved bile production, tumor necrosis factor-α, and interleukin-1β significantly compared with the DCD group (P Conclusion SELP rescued DCD livers from ischemia-reperfusion injury the same as the normothermic perfusion before or after CS groups. SELP after CS is more convenient than normothermic perfusion; hence, this technique may increase the organ pool.

Details

ISSN :
18732623
Volume :
52
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transplantation proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fcaebd3e7d7712a28180b585772e008c