1.Comparison of nighttime and daytime operation on outcomes of kidney transplant with deceased donors: a retrospective analysis.
Qi-Hang GUO ; Qian-Long LIU ; Xiao-Jun HU ; Yang LI ; Jin ZHENG ; Wu-Jun XUE
Chinese Medical Journal 2019;132(4):395-404
BACKGROUND:
Kidney transplant is always emergent operations and frequently need to be performed at nighttime to reduce cold ischemia time (CIT). Previous studies have revealed that fatigue and sleep deprivation can result in adverse consequences of medical procedures. This study aimed to evaluate whether nighttime operation has adverse impact on kidney transplant.
METHODS:
A retrospective analysis of recipients accepted kidney transplant from deceased donors in one center from 2014 to 2016 was performed. Daytime transplant was defined as operation started after 8 AM or ended before 8 PM and nighttime operation was defined as operation ended after 8 PM or started before 8 AM. The incidences of complications such as delayed graft function, acute rejection, surgical complications and nosocomial infections were compared between 2 groups. Student's t-test was used to analyze continuous variables such as serum creatinine (Scr) at 1-year of post-transplant. The Chi-square test was used to analyze categorical variables. Differences in recipients and graft survival were analyzed using Kaplan-Meier methodology and log-rank tests.
RESULTS:
Among the 443 recipients, 233 (52.6%) were classified into the daytime group and the others 210 (47.4%) were in the nighttime group. The 1-year survival rate of recipients was similar for the recipients in the daytime and nighttime groups (95.3% vs. 95.2%, P = 0.981). Although the 1-year graft survival rate in the nighttime group was slightly superior to that in the daytime group, the difference was not significant (92.4% vs. 88.4%, P = 0.164). Furthermore, Scr and incidence of complications were also not significantly different between the 2 groups.
CONCLUSIONS
Our results suggested that operation time of kidney transplant with short CIT has no significant impact on the outcome of kidney transplant. Nighttime operation of kidney transplant with short CIT could be postponed to the following day to alleviate the burden on medical staffs and avoid the potential risk.
Adult
;
Cadaver
;
Cold Ischemia
;
Female
;
Graft Survival
;
Humans
;
Kidney Transplantation
;
adverse effects
;
mortality
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Survival Rate
;
Time Factors
2.The Concept of Door-to-Surgery Time in Distal Digital Replantation
Seong Hwan KIM ; Dong Wan KIM ; Jae Ha HWANG ; Kwang Seog KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2018;33(9):e72-
BACKGROUND: Digital replantation has become a well-established technique that has revolutionized hand surgery. One of the most important factors to a successful replantation is less than 12 hours of warm and 24 hours of cold ischemia time. The purpose of this article was to present a concept of door-to-surgery time and test the hypothesis that success in distal digital replantation is associated with this time. METHODS: Forty-five patients with 49 distal amputations were included in the study. Data regarding patient demographics, amputation characteristics, ischemia time, and surgical outcome were collected. Factors related to a successful replantation were analyzed. Fisher's exact test was used for statistical analysis. RESULTS: Type I, II, and III Yamano classification were noted in 11 (22.4%), 11 (22.4%), and 27 (55.1%) amputations. All the digits had arterial anastomoses while 19 (38.8%) digits were replanted without venous anastomosis. The mean door-to-surgery time was 229 minutes. The overall success rate was 77.6%. There were no differences in the survival rates between replantations with or without venous anastomosis. Patients with less than 180 minutes of door-to-surgery time had a significantly better survival rate compared to patients with greater time. CONCLUSION: The overall success rate was 77.6%. Patients with less than 180 minutes of door-to-surgery time had a significantly greater success rate (95.0%) compared to patients with longer door-to-surgery time (65.5%). Further effort must be made to achieve this goal in digital replantation.
Amputation
;
Classification
;
Cold Ischemia
;
Demography
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Ischemia
;
Replantation
;
Survival Rate
3.The Need for New Donor Stratification to Predict Graft Survival in Deceased Donor Kidney Transplantation.
Shin Seok YANG ; Jaeseok YANG ; Curie AHN ; Sang Il MIN ; Jongwon HA ; Sung Joo KIM ; Jae Berm PARK
Yonsei Medical Journal 2017;58(3):626-630
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to determine whether stratification of deceased donors by the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) criteria negatively impacts graft survival. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed deceased donor and recipient pretransplant variables of kidney transplantations that occurred between February 1995 and December 2009. We compared clinical outcomes between standard criteria donors (SCDs) and expanded criteria donors (ECDs). RESULTS: The deceased donors consisted of 369 patients. A total of 494 transplant recipients were enrolled in this study. Mean age was 41.7±11.4 year (range 18–69) and 273 patients (55.4%) were male. Mean duration of follow-up was 8.8±4.9 years. The recipients from ECD kidneys were 63 patients (12.8%). The overall mean cold ischemia time was 5.7±3.2 hours. Estimated glomerular filtration rate at 1, 2, and 3 years after transplantation were significantly lower in ECD transplants (1 year, 62.2±17.6 vs. 51.0±16.4, p<0.001; 2 year, 62.2±17.6 vs. 51.0±16.4, p=0.001; 3 year, 60.9±23.5 vs. 54.1±18.7, p=0.047). In multivariate analysis, donor age (≥40 years) was an independent risk factor for graft failure. In Kaplan-Meier analyses, there was no significant difference in death-censored graft survival (Log rank test, p>0.05), although patient survival was lower in ECDs than SCDs (Log rank test, p=0.011). CONCLUSION: Our data demonstrate that stratification by the UNOS criteria does not predict graft survival. In order to expand the donor pool, new criteria for standard/expanded donors need to be modified by regional differences.
Cold Ischemia
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Glomerular Filtration Rate
;
Graft Survival*
;
Humans
;
Kidney Transplantation*
;
Kidney*
;
Male
;
Multivariate Analysis
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Risk Factors
;
Tissue Donors*
;
Transplant Recipients
;
Transplants*
4.Prediction of Kidney Graft Rejection Using Artificial Neural Network.
Leili TAPAK ; Omid HAMIDI ; Payam AMINI ; Jalal POOROLAJAL
Healthcare Informatics Research 2017;23(4):277-284
OBJECTIVES: Kidney transplantation is the best renal replacement therapy for patients with end-stage renal disease. Several studies have attempted to identify predisposing factors of graft rejection; however, the results have been inconsistent. We aimed to identify prognostic factors associated with kidney transplant rejection using the artificial neural network (ANN) approach and to compare the results with those obtained by logistic regression (LR). METHODS: The study used information regarding 378 patients who had undergone kidney transplantation from a retrospective study conducted in Hamadan, Western Iran, from 1994 to 2011. ANN was used to identify potential important risk factors for chronic nonreversible graft rejection. RESULTS: Recipients' age, creatinine level, cold ischemic time, and hemoglobin level at discharge were identified as the most important prognostic factors by ANN. The ANN model showed higher total accuracy (0.75 vs. 0.55 for LR), and the area under the ROC curve (0.88 vs. 0.75 for LR) was better than that obtained with LR. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study indicate that the ANN model outperformed LR in the prediction of kidney transplantation failure. Therefore, this approach is a promising classifier for predicting graft failure to improve patients' survival and quality of life, and it should be further investigated for the prediction of other clinical outcomes.
Causality
;
Cold Ischemia
;
Creatinine
;
Data Mining
;
Graft Rejection*
;
Humans
;
Iran
;
Kidney Failure, Chronic
;
Kidney Transplantation
;
Kidney*
;
Logistic Models
;
Quality of Life
;
Renal Replacement Therapy
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Risk Factors
;
ROC Curve
;
Transplants*
5.Hand-assisted Laparoscopic Donor Surgery for Living Donor Pancreas and Kidney Transplantation: A Single Center Experience.
Jeong Sub KIM ; Cheol Woong JUNG ; Heungman JUN ; Kwan Tae PARK
The Journal of the Korean Society for Transplantation 2016;30(4):178-183
BACKGROUND: In this era of donor shortage, use of organs from living donors has increased significantly. Nonetheless, less than 1% of pancreas transplantations involve living donors, despite the immunological benefits, reduced cold ischemic time, and decreased waiting time. One reason for the paucity of donors is the high morbidity after open surgery. Using hand-assisted laparoscopic donor surgery (HALDS) can be a favorable technique for living donors. METHODS: Using HALDS, we performed three Simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantations (SPKs) involving living donors. Two donors were women; one was a man. RESULTS: Their mean age was 34.3±4.7 years, and their body mass index was 23.2±2.36 kg/m². The mean operation time was 241±19.0 minutes and the mean cold-ischemic time of the kidney was 42.7±9.8 minutes, while that of the pancreas was 64.3±5.2 minutes. One donor developed a pancreatic fistula, which was controlled using conservative management. The donors' pancreatic and renal functions were well preserved postoperatively. CONCLUSIONS: HALDS for SPKs can be performed without significant complications if the surgeon has sufficient skill.
Body Mass Index
;
Cold Ischemia
;
Female
;
Hand-Assisted Laparoscopy
;
Humans
;
Kidney Transplantation*
;
Kidney*
;
Living Donors*
;
Pancreas Transplantation
;
Pancreas*
;
Pancreatic Fistula
;
Tissue Donors*
6.The risk factors of splenic arterial steal syndrome after orthotopic liver transplantation.
Luzhou ZHANG ; Dahong TENG ; Guang CHEN ; Zhenglu WANG ; Ying TANG ; Haijun GAO ; Hong ZHENG
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2015;53(11):836-840
OBJECTIVETo discuss the risk factors of splenic arterial steal syndrome (SASS) after orthotopic liver transplantation.
METHODSTwenty-four cases who confirmed SASS after liver transplantation in Tianjin First Central Hospital between June 2005 and June 2013 were analyzed retrospectively. Another 96 cases were selected randomly from those patients of the same time with no complication of SASS patients postoperatively as control group. Clinical data of two groups including diameter of splenic artery and hepatic artery preoperatively, weight of graft, weight of recipients, cold/warm ischemia time, an hepatic period and operation time and so on were collected. Others including hepatic artery peak systolic velocity (PSV), end diastolic velocity (EDV), blood flow resistance index and portal vein average velocity (PVF) on the first day after liver transplantation, the day before diagnosis, the day when diagnosed, the 1, 3, 7 days after treatment in SASS group and on 1, 3, 7, 9, 11, 14 days after liver transplantation in control group. Statistical analysis were made between two groups.
RESULTSThe splenic artery/hepatic artery ratio preoperatively and weight of donor liver,and the GRWR in SASS group and control group were 1.26 and 1.00, 1 032 g and 1 075 g, (1.40±0.30)% and (1.82±0.21)% respectively, with significantly statistical differences (Z=-6.40, Z=-2.22, t=-6.50; all P<0.05). The warm ischemia time, the cold ischemia time, the anhepatic period and operation time in SASS group and control group were 3.5 minutes and 4.0 minutes, 10.25 hours and 10.10 hours, 43 minutes and 45 minutes, 8.7 hours and 8.7 hours, with no significantly statistical differences (all P>0.05). RI of hepatic went up gradually in the early time after transplantation while dropped obviously when spleen artery spring coils embolization was received (P<0.01) and trended to stable two weeks later.
CONCLUSIONSSplenic artery/hepatic artery ratio and GRWR are the positive and negative risk factors respectively for SASS. The gradual rising of hepatic RI in the early time after transplantation may be the warning signal SASS and spleen artery spring coils embolization is the effective strategy for SASS after liver transplantation.
Cold Ischemia ; Embolization, Therapeutic ; Hepatic Artery ; pathology ; Humans ; Liver ; surgery ; Liver Transplantation ; adverse effects ; Retrospective Studies ; Risk Factors ; Spleen ; blood supply ; Splenic Artery ; pathology ; Vascular Diseases ; epidemiology ; Warm Ischemia
7.The Long-term Outcomes of Kidney Transplantation from Donation after Circulatory Death during Brain Death Donor Evaluation in a Single Center in Korea.
Nayoon HUR ; Hyojun PARK ; Kyowon LEE ; Gyuseong CHOI ; Jong Man KIM ; Jae Berm PARK ; Choon Hyuck KWON ; Sung Joo KIM ; Jae Won JOH ; Suk Koo LEE
The Journal of the Korean Society for Transplantation 2015;29(4):216-226
BACKGROUND: While the number of deceased donor donations has increased in Korea, the organ shortage remains a major limitation for kidney transplantation. Donation after circulatory death (DCD) can be an option to expand the donor pool. In this study we evaluated the short and long term survival of grafts and patients and assessed the risk factors for graft failure. METHODS: In a single center, from August 1997 to December 2013, 28 cases of recipients who received kidney transplantation from DCD were enrolled. Information about donor and recipient factors, graft conditions, and transplant outcomes was collected through review of medical records. We calculated overall graft and patient survival rates and the risk factors for graft failure according to donor criteria and whether or not delayed graft function (DGF) occurred. RESULTS: There was no primary non-function, but DGF developed in 67.9% (19/28). Graft losses occurred in five patients during a median follow-up period of 68.2 months (4~204). There was no significant difference in graft survival rates depending on the donor criteria and the occurrence of DGF. In addition, there were no noteworthy risk factors for graft failure among donor age, donor creatinine, extended criteria donor, recipient age, warm ischemic time, cold ischemic time, and DGF. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, despite the high incidence of DGF, the long-term graft and patient survival in kidney transplantation from DCD were acceptable. Therefore, DCD can be an alternative to expand the donor pool and to shorten the waiting time.
Brain Death*
;
Brain*
;
Cold Ischemia
;
Creatinine
;
Delayed Graft Function
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Graft Survival
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Kidney Transplantation*
;
Kidney*
;
Korea*
;
Medical Records
;
Risk Factors
;
Survival Rate
;
Tissue Donors*
;
Transplants
;
Warm Ischemia
8.Normothermic Cardiac Surgery with Warm Blood Cardioplegia in Patient with Cold Agglutinins.
Sang Ho CHO ; Dae Hyun KIM ; Young Tae KWAK
The Korean Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2014;47(2):133-136
Cold agglutinins are predominately immunoglobulin M autoantibodies that react at cold temperatures with surface antigens on the red blood cell. This can lead to hemagglutination at low temperatures, followed by complement fixation and subsequent hemolysis on rewarming. Development of hemagglutination or hemolysis in patients with cold agglutinins is a risk of cardiac surgery under hypothermia. In addition, there is the potential for intracoronary hemagglutination with inadequate distribution of cardioplegic solutions, thrombosis, embolism, ischemia, or infarction. We report a patient with incidentally detected cold agglutinin who underwent normothermic cardiac surgery with warm blood cardioplegia.
Agglutinins*
;
Antigens, Surface
;
Autoantibodies
;
Cardioplegic Solutions
;
Cardiopulmonary Bypass
;
Cold Temperature
;
Complement System Proteins
;
Embolism
;
Erythrocytes
;
Heart Arrest, Induced*
;
Hemagglutination
;
Hemolysis
;
Humans
;
Hypothermia
;
Immunoglobulin M
;
Infarction
;
Ischemia
;
Rewarming
;
Thoracic Surgery*
;
Thrombosis
9.Clinical Bilateral Poplitear Artery Entrapment Syndrome Caused by a Anomalous Origin of the Gastrocnemius Muscle.
Hee Gon PARK ; Sung Hyun YUN ; Sung Jin KIM
The Korean Journal of Sports Medicine 2013;31(1):26-29
Popliteal artery entrapment syndrome can result from abnormal branching patterns of the popliteal artery or the anatomically abnormal placement of nearby muscles and tendons leading to a sustained compression of the popliteal artery. This compression leads to chronic capillary damage and early arteriosclerosis and embolism that can lead to distal ischemia. Thus early treatment is required to prevent harm to the lower limb. This is a rare congenital disease that mostly affects young adults, usually presenting with intermittent claudication of the leg, coldness and edema. A case where a 16-year-old female presented with pain and coldness in the lower right limb that started 1 year ago will be discussed. In this case, magnetic resonance imaging and arterial angiography lead to a diagnosis of popliteal artery entrapment resulting from an abnormal origin of the medial head of Gastrocnemius.
Angiography
;
Arteries
;
Arteriosclerosis
;
Capillaries
;
Cold Temperature
;
Edema
;
Embolism
;
Extremities
;
Female
;
Head
;
Humans
;
Intermittent Claudication
;
Ischemia
;
Leg
;
Lower Extremity
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Muscle, Skeletal
;
Muscles
;
Popliteal Artery
;
Tendons
;
Young Adult
10.Successful Reuse of a Kidney Allograft from a Brain-Dead Donor into a Second Recipient: A Case Report.
Hong Rae CHO ; Sang Jun PARK ; Gyu Yeol KIM ; Ho Jong PARK ; Jong Soo LEE ; Hye Jeong CHOI
The Journal of the Korean Society for Transplantation 2013;27(2):62-66
The limited donor organ supply is a main problem for transplant surgeons in Korea, and forces them to use organs from extended sources. In one such case, we reused a transplanted kidney allograft in August 2012. This was the first successful case involving the reuse of a transplanted kidney allograft in Korea. The kidney donor was a 44-year-old man brain-dead due to spontaneous subdural hemorrhage. He received a kidney transplant from his sister in 2006. The second recipient was a 59-year-old man who had been receiving hemodialysis for 11 years. There were full human leukocyte antigen (HLA) matches between the first donor and the first recipient, and two HLA mismatches between the first donor and the second recipient. Fortunately, we were able to perform a crossmatch test between the first donor and the second recipient as well as the first recipient and the second recipient (with the first donor's agreement). We used the left iliac artery for perfusion instead of the aorta during organ procurement. The cold ischemic time was 4 hours and the initial kidney function was excellent. The patient has been doing well, without any significant complications or rejections, for 3 weeks. His last serum creatinine level was 0.91 mg/dL. Our case shows that the reuse of kidney allografts could be a possible solution for the shortage of donor kidneys. However, this method requires careful consideration and an agreement among participants before its performance.
Aorta
;
Brain Death
;
Cold Ischemia
;
Creatinine
;
Hematoma, Subdural
;
Humans
;
Iliac Artery
;
Kidney
;
Kidney Transplantation
;
Korea
;
Leukocytes
;
Perfusion
;
Rejection (Psychology)
;
Renal Dialysis
;
Siblings
;
Tissue and Organ Procurement
;
Tissue Donors
;
Transplantation, Homologous
;
Transplants

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