Effects of Hepatic Denervation on Inchemia-Reperfusion of the Dogs Liver
The bulletin of the Yamaguchi Medical School Volume 42 Issue 3-4
Page 87-92
published_at 1995-12
Title
Effects of Hepatic Denervation on Inchemia-Reperfusion of the Dogs Liver
Creators
Hiraki Sakurao
Source Identifiers
Creator Keywords
Hepatic Denervation
Ischemia-Reperfusion
Liver Transplantation
To investigate the role of the hepatic nerves in ischemia-reperfusion of the liver, we compared hepatic midro-hemodynamics in a denevervated liver model to that in the normal liver. The liver was reperfused after total hepatic ischemia for 30 minnutes. Hepatic tissue blood flow, index of oxygen saturation, and hemoglobin concentration were measered continuously from 5 minutes before clamping to 120 minutes after reperfusion. In the very early phase following reperfusion (at 1, 2, and 3 minutes), the hepatic tissue blood flow was significantly higher in the denervated group (P<0.05). At 2 minutes (P<0.01) and at 3, 5, and 15 minutes (P<0.05), the index of oxygen saturation in the denervated group was significantly higher. Rapid increaseing blood inflow after repertion was observed, possibly due to impairment of intrahepatic microcirculatory regulation caused by denervation. This suggests that the rapid blood inflow during reperfusion after ischemia may modify the reperfusion injury of the transplanted liver grafts.
Languages
eng
Resource Type
departmental bulletin paper
Publishers
Yamaguchi University Graduate School of Medicine
Date Issued
1995-12
File Version
Version of Record
Access Rights
open access
Relations
[ISSN]0513-1812
[NCID]AA00594272
Schools
医学部