1.Hyperthermia associated with biliary obstruction during living donor liver transplantation.
Hyeryung KANG ; Joohyun PARK ; Jeong Jin LEE ; Gaab Soo KIM
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2018;71(4):323-327
Intraoperative hypothermia occurs frequently, but hyperthermia is relatively rare during general anesthesia. We experienced a case of hyperthermia during living donor liver transplantation that appeared to be significantly associated with biliary obstruction. A 65-year-old male patient was diagnosed with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma, and living donor liver transplantation was planned after confirmation of no metastasis via intraoperative frozen biopsy. Following resection of a segment of common bile duct for frozen biopsy, the surgeon clamped the common bile duct, and the patient's body temperature increased gradually to 39.5°C. As the congested bile was drained, the body temperature decreased to the normal range. This case report suggests that when a patient develops unexplained hyperthermia during hepatobiliary surgery or in a chance of biliary obstruction, clinicians should consider bile congestion as a possible reason for hyperthermia.
Aged
;
Anesthesia, General
;
Bile
;
Biopsy
;
Body Temperature
;
Cholangiocarcinoma
;
Common Bile Duct
;
Estrogens, Conjugated (USP)
;
Fever*
;
Humans
;
Hypothermia
;
Liver Transplantation*
;
Liver*
;
Living Donors*
;
Male
;
Neoplasm Metastasis
;
Reference Values