Yonsei medical journal
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Intestinal transplantation has been established as a treatment option for patients that suffer from intestinal failure with complications from total parenteral nutrition. It is still rapidly evolving and just reached a landmark of 1,000 cases worldwide. ⋯ Clinical outcome in intestinal transplantation has improved significantly over time, impacted by refinement of surgical technique and novel immunosuppression. However rejection, infection, and technical complications still remain the most difficult barrier to improve patient and graft survival.
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Yonsei medical journal · Dec 2004
Case ReportsIsolated small bowel transplantation from a living-related donor at the Catholic University of Korea--a case report of rejection -free course-.
The bowel transplantation team at the Catholic Medical Center, Korea, on April 9 2004, accomplished a case of isolated small bowel transplantation (SBT) in a 57 year-old female with short bowel syndrome. The primary surgery was a jejunocolostomy due to mesenteric vein thrombosis, while maintaining 30 cm of the jejunum and colon distal to the splenic flexure. Her renal function was partially unbalanced. ⋯ The patient was discharged on day 42. A CMV infection on day 83 was successfully treated with 3 weeks of gancyclovir therapy. She has been nutritionally independent, with complete oral feeding, and free of rejection until day 170 after the transplantation.
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Yonsei medical journal · Dec 2004
Independent predictors for primary non-function after liver transplantation.
Primary non-function (PNF) after liver transplantation has been found to be the most common cause of early graft loss, which accounts for up to 36% of such failures. The cause of PNF is not known. The purpose of this study was to identify factors associated with and independently predictive of PNF after liver transplantation. ⋯ Logistic regression identified the use of donor iliac vein conduit for the portal vein reconstruction (p=0.003, odds ratio=3.15, 95% confidence interval: 1.49-6.64) and the racial difference between donor and recipient (p=0.012, odds ratio=2.31, 95% confidence interval: 1.20- 4.45) to be independent predictors of PNF. The exact cause of these findings, whether physiologic or immunologic, remains unknown. If confirmed in larger data sets, the attention to these factors may minimize the possibility of PNF in non-emergency situations.