Abstract

Background. The liver and portal circulation contribute to production and clearance of endothelin-1 (ET-1). This study was undertaken to investigate what variables relate to the dynamics of ET-1 in hepatic resection and its clinical implication.Patients and Methods. On 20 patients with (n = 8) or without (n = 12) chronic liver disease who underwent hepatic resection, peripheral arterial and portal venous ET-1 were serially measured to determine a correlation with pre-, intra-, and postoperative variables.Results. The preoperative factors with which the portal ET-1 showed a positive correlation were the indocyanine green retention rate at 15 min (ICG R15) and portal venous pressure. The ET-1 clearance, as calculated from the difference between the portal and the peripheral ET-1 concentrations, was also correlated with the ICG R15. The peripheral ET-1 elevated significantly in the patients with increasing intraoperative blood loss or hepatic inflow occlusion. An increase in the portal ET-1 was correlated with an elevation of portal venous pressure after hepatectomy. Postoperative increase in serum bilirubin was closely correlated with the peripheral ET-1 at closure.Conclusion. The peripheral and portal ET-1 are correlated with not only preoperative hepatic reserve and portal venous pressure but also invasiveness of hepatectomy and postoperative course.

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