Liver Transplantation in Man--II, a Report of two Orthotopic Liver Transplants in Adult Recipients
- 30 November 1968
- Vol. 4 (5630), 540-546
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.4.5630.540
Abstract
Two patients with primary hepatic malignancy were treated by hepatectomy and orthotopic liver transplantation. In both cases the donor liver was infused with cold solutions and kept chilled without continuous perfusion. There was immediate satisfactory hepatic function in both transplants. The first patient died after 11 weeks from overwhelming bacterial and fungal infections probably secondary to hepatic infarction due to thrombosis of the recipient hepatic artery. The thrombus occurred at the site of the arterial clamp. In an attempt to control the growth before transplantation, the patient had been treated with large doses of chlorambucil, which resulted in extreme marrow depression and septicaemia. The second patient developed cholestatic jaundice during the second and third weeks after transplantation, with histological evidence of mild rejection, which was controlled by increasing the dose of immunosuppressive agents. He is now well, having returned to work six weeks after the operation. Though the first patient showed no evidence of rejection, it is concluded that patients receiving liver allografts should receive immunosuppressive therapy.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Orthotopic homotransplantation of the human liver.
- The detection of venous thrombosis of the legs using 125I-labelled fibrinogenBritish Journal of Surgery, 1968
- Infections in Recipients of Liver HomograftsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1968
- Extended survival in 3 cases of orthotopic homotransplantation of the human liver.1968
- Prolonged survival of liver transplants in the pig.BMJ, 1967
- CYTOMEGALOVIRUS HEPATITIS IN THE ADULTThe Lancet, 1967
- Quantitative Estimation of Split Products of Fibrinogen in Human Serum, Relation to Diagnosis and TreatmentBlood, 1966
- THE ASSESSMENT OF FIBRINOLYTIC ACTIVITY IN THE BLOODBritish Medical Bulletin, 1964
- THE MECHANISM OF CLOT DISSOLUTION BY PLASMIN*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1959