1.Research progress of perioperative pain relief in living donor kidney transplantation
Yushi HOU ; Jingcheng LYU ; Haijun HOU ; Yichen ZHU
International Journal of Surgery 2023;50(2):132-139
In recent years, living kidney donors is getting valuable with the increasingly needs of kidney transplantation. However, living kidney donors can receive no benefits but greater incidence and severity of pain compared to other kinds of renal surgeries. Thus, it is getting popular on how to relief the postoperative pain during perioperative period for living kidney donors. As multidisciplinary cooperation developing, preoperative predictive nursing, changed analgesia mode, modified pneumoperitoneum, and postoperative application of different kinds of analgesic drugs can further relief the postoperative pain of living kindney donors. This paper sums up different modalities of pain relief in patients undergoing live donor nephrectomy to provide reference to clinical decision of living kidney transplantation.
2.Feasibility and perioperative safety of retroperitoneal laparoscopic nephrectomy for autosomal dominant polycystic kidney before kindey transplantation
Jingcheng LYU ; Yushi HOU ; Yuwen GUO ; Lei ZHANG ; Zhipeng WANG ; Jian ZHANG ; Yichen ZHU
International Journal of Surgery 2022;49(10):680-684
Objective:To evaluate the feasibility and perioperative safety of retroperitoneal laparoscopic nephrectomy for autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) before kidney transplantation.Methods:A total of 22 patients with ADPKD who underwent laparoscopic polycystic nephrectomy before kidney transplantation in Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University from January 2013 to December 2020 were enrolled in this retrospective study. Preoperative epidemiological data, operation time, intraoperative blood loss, perioperative blood transfusion, conversion rate, postoperative gastrointestinal function recovery time, drainage tube placement time, postoperative hospital stay, incidence and severity of complications were collected.Results:The mean age of all patients in this study was (50.95±9.28) years old, and the mean preoperative polycystic kidney diameter was (18.83±2.38) cm. In all patients, 20 patients were scheduled for polycystic nephrectomy due to transplantation and 2 patients were done for polycystic renal cyst rupture and hemorrhage. The mean operation time of all patients was (191.14±70.46) min, and the median intraoperative blood loss was 100 mL. Among them, 5 patients had large intraoperative blood loss, and were given intraoperative blood transfusion. Two of all patients were converted to open due to severe intraoperative adhesions. In terms of postoperative recovery, the mean recovery time of gastrointestinal function was (2.09±0.61) d, the mean time of abdominal drainage tube placement was (5.32±2.08) d, the mean postoperative hospital stay was (7.55±2.34) d. In terms of postoperative complications, 4 patients developed postoperative incision pain, bleeding or other complications, but all improved after symptomatic treatment.Conclusions:For patients with ADPKD, original polycystic kidney can be effectively resected by retroperitoneoscopy before transplantation. At the same time, the operation time is short, and patients have quick postoperative recovery, even the incidence and severity of postoperative complications are low. Therefore, retroperitoneal laparoscopic nephrectomy can be used as the first choice for the removal of original polycystic kidney before renal transplantation in ADPKD patients.
3.Intraoperative incision combined with local anesthesia to improve postoperative pain after laparoscopic live donor nephrectomy
Yichen ZHU ; Yushi HOU ; Jingcheng LYU ; Yuwen GUO ; Zhipeng WANG ; Lei WAN
International Journal of Surgery 2021;48(12):829-833,f4
Objective:To evaluate the effect of intraoperative incision combined with local anesthesia in improving postoperative pain after retroperitoneal laparoscopic living donor nephrectomy.Methods:Using retrospective research methods, 28 donors who underwent hand-assisted retroperitoneal laparoscopic living donor nephrectomy at the Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University from January 2018 to December 2020 were selected as the research group. Before the wound was sutured during the operation use 0.2% ropivacaine 20 mL+ 5 mg dexamethasone to block the transverse abdominis fascia and subcutaneously for infiltration anesthesia. The other 1∶1 matched 28 donors who had the same operation method but used on-demand systemic opioid analgesia after the operation as the control group. The demographic indicators (age, gender, body mass index, length of donor kidney), intraoperative conditions (intraoperative blood loss, operation time, warm ischemia time), 2, 12, 24, and 48 hours pain visual analogue scales(VAS) after operation were compared between the two groups of patients, postoperative systemic opioid demand rate, postoperative exhaust time, time to return to the ground, complication rate (postoperative bleeding, lung infection, lymphatic fistula, wound infection, intestinal obstruction), postoperative length of hospitalization and other information. Measurement data were expressed as mean±standard deviation ( Mean± SD), and independent sample t-test was used for comparison between groups; Chi-square test or Fisher exact probability method was used for comparison of count data between groups. Results:The pain VAS of the donors in the research group were significantly lower than those in the control group at 2 h, 12 h, 24 h, and 48 h after surgery (2 h: 1.6±1.0 vs 3.9±1.1; 12 h: 1.9±0.7 vs 3.1±1.0; 24 h: 1.6±0.5 vs 2.9±0.8; 48 h: 1.2±0.5 vs 2.3±0.8; P<0.05). The donors in the research group postoperative morphine requirement rate was also significantly lower than that of the control group (0 vs 21.4%), and the postoperative recovery time was significantly earlier than that of the control group [(25.7±4.5) h vs (30.6±6.6) h], the difference was statistically significant ( P<0.05). Lymphatic fistula was the main postoperative complication. There was no statistically significant difference between the research group and the control group (14.3% vs 25.0%) ( P>0.05). Conclusion:Intraoperative incision transversus abdominis fascia and subcutaneous combined local block anesthesia can effectively reduce the pain after laparoscopic donor nephrectomy, reduce the use of opioids, promote early postoperative activities of the donor, and will not increase postoperative complications incidence rate.
4.Effect of visceral fat thickness on the difficulty of renal transplantation and postoperative complications
Jingcheng LYU ; Yushi HOU ; Ye TIAN ; Yuwen GUO ; Lei ZHANG ; Yichen ZHU
International Journal of Surgery 2024;51(2):91-96
Objective:To investigate the effect of visceral fat thickness before operation on the operative difficulty and postoperative complications in renal transplantation recipients.Methods:A total of 179 patients diagnosed with end-stage renal disease who underwent kidney transplantation in Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University from January 2020 to January 2022 were retrospectively included. According to the visceral fat thickness measured by CT before transplantation (distance from anterior wall of abdominal aorta to parietal peritoneum at 1 cm above umbilicus), patients were divided into two groups, with 103 patients in thin visceral fat group with visceral fat thickness ≤7.5 cm and 76 patients in thick visceral fat group with visceral fat thickness>7.5 cm. The epidemiological data before renal transplantation, operative time, intraoperative blood loss, postoperative complications, renal function after transplantation and patients′ recovery state were analyzed and compared between the two groups. Measurement data were expressed as mean±standard deviation ( ± s), and independent sample t-test was used for comparison between groups. The Chi-square test was used to compare the count data. Results:The mean age and body mass index of patients in thin visceral fat group [(38.70±11.50) years and (21.28±2.93) kg/m 2] were lower than those in thick visceral fat group [(43.14±11.42) years and (24.78±3.37) kg/m 2], and the differences were statistically significant ( P< 0.05). There was no significant difference in other preoperative epidemiological data between the two groups ( P>0.05). In terms of operation difficulty, the mean operation time of thin visceral fat group was (117.16±34.33) min, which was significantly shorter than that of thick visceral fat group (137.11±20.02) min. The mean intraoperative blood loss in the thin visceral fat group was (89.12±45.95) mL, which was lower than that in the thick visceral fat group (125.39±54.88) mL, the differences were statistically significant ( P<0.001). In terms of postoperative complications, 41 patients in the thin visceral fat group had postoperative infection, incision pain and intraoperative effusion, and the incidence was 39.8% (41/103), which was significantly lower than that in the thick visceral fat group (78.9%, 60/76), the difference was statistically significant ( P<0.001); However, there was no significant difference in the incidence of Clavien-Dindo grade 3 or higher complications between the two groups ( P> 0.05). There was no significant difference in serum creatinine levels at 3, 5, 7 days and 1, 2 months after surgery among patients with different visceral fat thickness ( P> 0.05). However, the mean serum creatinine level in the thin visceral fat group was (116.06±36.45) μmol/L, which was lower than that in the thick visceral fat group (133.35±72.26) μmol/L, and the difference was statistically significant ( P=0.038). There was no significant difference in the incidence of delayed renal function recovery between the two groups ( P> 0.05). At the same time, there was no significant difference in postoperative drainage tube indwelling time and hospital stay between the two groups ( P> 0.05). Conclusions:The thicker visceral fat in end-stage renal disease patients before transplantation, the higher the incidence of general postoperative complications, but the severity of complications, patients′ recovery after transplantation and the short-term function of the transplanted kidney are not significantly related to the thickness of visceral fat in the recipients. Meanwhile, although the visceral fat thickness of the recipients in this study was correlated with serum creatinine levels at 3 months after transplantation, its correlation with long-term graft renal function and graft survival time remains to be further studied.