To define the role of surgical shunting for patients with poor hepatic reserve (Child's class C) in the era of TIPS.
Most physicians prefer TIPS to surgical shunting for patients with poor hepatic ...reserve because of anticipated poor long-term survival.
Sixty-two patients of Child's class C with bleeding varices not amenable to endoscopic sclerotherapy or banding were prospectively randomized to undergo TIPS or 8-mm prosthetic H-graft portacaval shunt (HGPCS) from 1993 to 1999. Resource consumption and survival after shunting were determined.
Twenty-nine patients underwent TIPS and 33 underwent HGPCS. After HGPCS, survival at 3 years was favorable but not statistically superior. TIPS was more often associated with shunt stenoses/occlusions, recurrent hemorrhage, shunt revisions, and shunt failure. Long-term follow-up documented that after HGPCS, patients required fewer hospital and ICU days and fewer units of RBCs transfused. After HGPCS, cost of care was less, as was the median cost of care per day of survival.
For Child's class C patients undergoing HGPCS or TIPS, long-term survival is similar, though favoring HGPCS. Similarly, measures of resource consumption and cost of care following hospital discharge favor HGPCS. HGPCS should be preferentially applied for acceptable patients without access to convenient capable post-shunt care or without definitive plans for imminent transplantation.
Biliary complications account for significant morbidity inorthotopic liver transplantation (OLT), with a reported incidence ranging from 6% to 47%, and many centers are reassessing the need and ...options available for stenting the biliary anastomosis. We report on our experience using a 6F Silastic, double J, ureteral stent as an internal biliary stent in OLT. From October 15, 1995, to September 30, 1998, a total of 99 patients at our institution underwent 108 OLTs. Of these, 77 patients received an end-to-end choledochocholedochostomy over an internal stent. Three patients died within 1 week post-OLT, leaving 74 patients for evaluation (follow-up, 2 to 38 months). Stents were placed transanastomotic and transsphincteric at the time of OLT and secured with a dissolvable suture. At 4 to 6 weeks post-OLT, scents visible within the biliary tree on kidney, ureters, and bladder radiograph were removed endoscopically. Graft and patient survival rates were 92% and 96%, respectively. There were 12 biliary complications (18%): anastomotic leak in 6 patients (9%), anastomotic stricture in 5 patients (7.6%), and stent migration in 1 patient (1.5%). Thirty-two patients (43%) passed the biliary stent without intervention, whereas 42 patients (57%) underwent esophagogastro duodenoscopy (EGD) stent removal at 4 to 6 weeks without incident. Treatment of the complications included percutaneous drainage, endoscopic dilatation with stenting, and/or conversion to Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy. The use of the 6 F Silastic, double-J, ureteral scent provides a safe and effective means of stenting the biliary anastomosis in OLT Major advantages to this method are that it: (1) is completely internal, (2) is biliary decompressive, (3) is radiopaque, (4) can be spontaneously passed, and (5) is easily accessible for EGD extraction.
To compare the primary patency of two structurally different metallic stents in an animal model of hemodialysis access grafts.
Nineteen synthetic femorofemoral arteriovenous shunts were created in 10 ...dogs. After a 1-month period of maturation (during which one graft thrombosed), stents were placed spanning the venous anastomosis. The grafts were divided into two treatment groups (Wallstent, n = 6, and Gianturco stent, n = 6) and a control group with no stent (n = 6). Fistulograms and pressure measurements were obtained at monthly intervals for 6 months or until thrombosis of the graft.
Mean graft patency in the Wallstent group (112 days +/- 30) was significantly shorter than in the control (157 days +/- 32, P < .03) or Gianturco (157 days +/- 32, P < .05) groups. Patency in the Gianturco stent group was no different from that in the control group. Stenosis due to intimal hyperplasia within the stents appeared greater in the Wallstent group but did not achieve statistical significance. One Wallstent migration, three Gianturco stents shifts, and two Gianturco stent breakages occurred. Histologic examination revealed a necrotizing vasculitis in the portion of vein containing the stent in all grafts treated with the Gianturco stent but not in any other grafts.
In an animal model of hemodialysis access grafts, the Gianturco stent had longer primary patency than the Wallstent when placed across the venous anastomosis. However, stent fractures and focal necrotizing inflammation may limit the use of the Gianturco stent in hemodialysis access.