Abstract
BackgroundEarly extubation after liver transplantation is safe and accelerates patient recovery. Patients with end-stage liver disease undergo sarcopenic changes, and sarcopenia is associated with postoperative morbidity and mortality. We investigated the impact of core muscle mass on the feasibility of immediate extubation in the operating room (OR) after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT).MethodsA total of 295 male adult LDLT patients were retrospectively reviewed between January 2011 and December 2017. In total, 40 patients were excluded due to emergency surgery or severe encephalopathy. A total of 255 male LDLT patients were analyzed in this study. According to the OR extubation criteria, the study population was classified into immediate and conventional extubation groups (39.6 vs. 60.4%). Psoas muscle area was estimated using abdominal computed tomography and normalized by height squared (psoas muscle index [PMI]).ResultsThere were no significant differences in OR extubation rates among the five attending transplant anesthesiologists. The preoperative PMI correlated with respiratory performance. The preoperative PMI was higher in the immediate extubation group than in the conventional extubation group. Potentially significant perioperative factors in the univariate analysis were entered into a multivariate analysis, in which preoperative PMI and intraoperative factors (i.e., continuous renal replacement therapy, significant post-reperfusion syndrome, and fresh frozen plasma transfusion) were associated with OR extubation. The duration of ventilator support and length of intensive care unit stay were shorter in the immediate extubation group than in the conventional extubation group, and the incidence of pneumonia and early allograft dysfunction were also lower in the immediate extubation group.ConclusionsOur study could improve the accuracy of predictions concerning immediate post-transplant extubation in the OR by introducing preoperative PMI into predictive models for patients who underwent elective LDLT.
Highlights
Extubation after liver transplantation is safe and accelerates patient recovery
Baseline characteristics of the study population The initial study population consisted of 295 male adult patients who underwent living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) at our hospital between January 2011 and December 2017
After removing 40 patients based on the exclusion criteria, 255 male patients who underwent elective LDLT remained
Summary
Extubation after liver transplantation is safe and accelerates patient recovery. Patients with endstage liver disease undergo sarcopenic changes, and sarcopenia is associated with postoperative morbidity and mortality. We investigated the impact of core muscle mass on the feasibility of immediate extubation in the operating room (OR) after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT). Because the model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score has a limitation in terms of reflecting the physical and nutritional conditions of patients with ESLD, sarcopenia has additional prognostic value for morbidity and mortality in patients with ESLD [4,5,6,7]. Studies of other surgeries showed that early tracheal extubation has favorable effects on postoperative patient recovery [10, 11]. Because LT surgery is one of the most complex procedures currently performed, some transplant clinicians remain concerned regarding the potential risk of cardiopulmonary complications, reoperation, failed extubation, and impaired recovery from surgical stress [13, 19], despite the identification in previous studies of predictors of early extubation in the operating room (OR) after LT [14, 15]
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