Roux-en-Y bleeding after living donor liver transplantation: a novel technique for surgical treatment

Upper gastrointestinal bleeding (GIB) is one of the most common gastroenterologic complications following liver transplantation. The aim of this study is to define the prevalence of GIB due to Roux- en Y (R-Y) enteral anastomoses after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) and recommend an anast...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transplantation proceedings 2003-06, Vol.35 (4), p.1463-1465
Hauptverfasser: Icoz, G, Kilic, M, Zeytunlu, M, Yaprak, O, Arikan, C, Yuzer, Y, Tokat, Y
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container_end_page 1465
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1463
container_title Transplantation proceedings
container_volume 35
creator Icoz, G
Kilic, M
Zeytunlu, M
Yaprak, O
Arikan, C
Yuzer, Y
Tokat, Y
description Upper gastrointestinal bleeding (GIB) is one of the most common gastroenterologic complications following liver transplantation. The aim of this study is to define the prevalence of GIB due to Roux- en Y (R-Y) enteral anastomoses after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) and recommend an anastomotic technique for easy surgical intervention. Ninety-five patients underwent 96 LDLT from June 1999 through January 2003. R-Y biliary reconstruction was employed in 43 patients. Anastomoses were end-to-side (ES) in the first 25 patients and side-to-side (SS) type in the last 18 patients. GIB occurred in 13 patients (30%). The R-Y anastomotic line was shown to be the bleeding site in 10 patients. Anastomoses were in ES fashion in 7 of 10 patients (70%). In other words 28% of ES and 17% of SS anastomoses displayed a bleeding episode after LDLT. Four patients required surgical intervention (Three ES, one SS), namely an operative rate of 9%. The type of the jejunojejunostomy, the UNOS or Child-Pugh scores, the presence of preexisting portal hypertension, the duration of portal vein clamping, the GRWR of patients, revealed no statistical significant difference between bleeding and non- bleeding patients. Although statistical analyses did not reveal any significant difference (P = .47), GIB was higher among patients with an ES type of anastomoses. As a result we recommend a jejunojejunostomy in SS fashion on the antimesenteric borders of the jejunal segments with a 3–4 cm blind intestinal segment. The surgical procedure for R-Y bleeding may then be performed without disrupting the jejunojejunostomy.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0041-1345(03)00484-6
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The aim of this study is to define the prevalence of GIB due to Roux- en Y (R-Y) enteral anastomoses after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) and recommend an anastomotic technique for easy surgical intervention. Ninety-five patients underwent 96 LDLT from June 1999 through January 2003. R-Y biliary reconstruction was employed in 43 patients. Anastomoses were end-to-side (ES) in the first 25 patients and side-to-side (SS) type in the last 18 patients. GIB occurred in 13 patients (30%). The R-Y anastomotic line was shown to be the bleeding site in 10 patients. Anastomoses were in ES fashion in 7 of 10 patients (70%). In other words 28% of ES and 17% of SS anastomoses displayed a bleeding episode after LDLT. Four patients required surgical intervention (Three ES, one SS), namely an operative rate of 9%. The type of the jejunojejunostomy, the UNOS or Child-Pugh scores, the presence of preexisting portal hypertension, the duration of portal vein clamping, the GRWR of patients, revealed no statistical significant difference between bleeding and non- bleeding patients. Although statistical analyses did not reveal any significant difference (P = .47), GIB was higher among patients with an ES type of anastomoses. As a result we recommend a jejunojejunostomy in SS fashion on the antimesenteric borders of the jejunal segments with a 3–4 cm blind intestinal segment. 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subjects Anastomosis, Roux-en-Y - adverse effects
Anastomosis, Roux-en-Y - methods
Follow-Up Studies
Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage - etiology
Graft Survival - physiology
Humans
Jejunostomy
Jejunum - surgery
Liver Transplantation - adverse effects
Liver Transplantation - methods
Liver Transplantation - mortality
Prevalence
Survival Rate
Time Factors
title Roux-en-Y bleeding after living donor liver transplantation: a novel technique for surgical treatment
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