Abstract
Background and AimsAmong all transplanted abdominal organs, the small intestine is one of the most ischemia sensitive. Appropriate graft selection, procurement, and preservation are crucial for optimum graft and patient survival. We evaluated ischemic damage in human small intestine grafts under different hypothermic preservation conditions (cold static and continuous perfusion) and solutions: histidine-tryptophan-ketoglutarate (HTK) and University of Wisconsin (UW). MethodsFourteen small intestinal grafts were procured from deceased donors. HTK and UW were used for the vascular perfusion at the cross clamp, and UW, HTK, or Ringer Lactate were used for the luminal flush at the back table. Therefore, part of the same harvested intestine was stored in cold static storage and in continuous perfusion preservation (with intestinal perfusion unit) simultaneously. Histological samples were collected from the jejunum and ileum at different time points and different preservation conditions. The samples were collected before the initiation of cold storage (T0), after 8 hours of cold static (ST8), or after 8 hours of continuous perfusion preservation (PT8) (n = 161 samples). Blinded histological evaluation was conducted and ischemic damage was determined using the Park/Chiu scale. ResultsThe ileum had less ischemic damage than the jejunum, regardless of using static or continuous perfusion preservation. There was no significantly ischemic damage difference between intestinal grafts flushed and perfused with UW or HTK. ConclusionThe jejunum is more susceptible to ischemic injury than the ileum. UW and HTK are equivalent to preserve intestinal graft. This suggests that selective transplantation of ileum could reduce ischemia-related postoperative complications.
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