Abstract
Sixteen patients with acute and chronic liver disease undergoing OLT were studied regarding the role of the liver and the gut in complement activation. Also, the relation between complement activation and clinical manifestations during the liver transplantation reperfusion period was investigated. Blood samples for measurement of complement anaphylatoxin C3a (C3a), complement anaphylatoxin C5a (C5a), and terminal C5b-9 complement complex (TCC) were taken simultaneously from the central venous catheter and the radial arterial line before starting the operative procedure, 1 min before declamping, and 1-2 min, 5 min, 30 min and 6-12 hr after declamping. Simultaneous blood sampling from the radial arterial line, central venous catheter, portal vein, and hepatic vein was performed 1-2 min and 5 min after completed unclamping. Elevated plasma levels of C3a and TCC were found upon reperfusion, while C5a levels remained unchanged throughout the operation compared with the preoperative levels. The levels of C3a in the portal vein were higher compared with the levels in the simultaneously obtained samples from the radial artery. The results indicate complement cascade activation located to the gut during the reperfusion phase of OLT. Seventy-five percent of the patient studied suffered from the postreperfusion syndrome, indicated by profound hypotension upon reperfusion of the transplanted liver. There was a significant correlation between high concentration of C3a anaphylatoxin and development of profound hypotension.
Published Version
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