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Book Details
Abstract
Liver Transplantation (LT), until recently the ‘forbidden fruit’, is the newest, the sexiest, the most controversial and arguably, the most technically challenging subspecialty of Surgical Gastroenterology to have mushroomed in India. In a journey spanning 12 years, 28 centers and 1500 liver transplants, we imagined there would be a gripping story to tell. It was only appropriate then, that we chose to inaugurate the series with an overview of Liver Transplantation. In the last 2 decades, the field has seen rapid progress with 1- and 5-year patient survival improving from 80% and 50% to 90% and 80%, respectively, owing to technical refinement, and better immunosuppressants, intensive care, and patient monitoring. Despite being a relatively new entrant into the field, India can now boast of at least some islands of excellence that have caught up with the "best in the west". This means the evolution of LT in these centers has been fast-forwarded up a steep curve. We have come a long way from the point of every LT being considered an experimental procedure with much media and public hype to one where it is accepted as a successful and durable panacea for all liver failure. The popularity of teams running successful programs in India has swung from being ostracized when the chips were down, to being celebrated and envied when the going became good. The focus has shifted from immediate to long-term survival, from surgical heroism to building multidisciplinary teams, from anecdotal to hard data and from media reports to scientific publications. ‘Fly-by night’ operations are on the decline as realization of their futility dawns on new centers and transplant teams. They are now happier to take the longer route of developing trained in-house teams. After spending a good part of the last decade honing the technique of living donor liver transplantation, we are becoming more sensitive to the morbidity and mortality risks to the living liver donor. We want to minimize the liver volume removed from the donor, and want to develop techniques of minimal access. More importantly, we want to train our guns back on pushing donation after brain or cardiac death. We have begun to maintain databases, are getting into audit mode and want a National registry. We want standardized treatment guidelines and training curricula. We want to take part in multicenter trials and further meaningful clinical and laboratory research. As a community, the liver transplant doctors of India are on a warpath of progress. We want it all and we want it now! The first step to the march into the future is to size up the past and the present. That is what we have attempted to do in this volume.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Front Cover\r | Front Cover | ||
Front Matter\r | ia | ||
Copyright | ib | ||
Contributors | ic | ||
Contents | ig | ||
Foreword | i | ||
Preface | iii | ||
How to Set up a Liver Transplant Center in India? | 1a | ||
Establishing A Liver Transplantcenter | 2 | ||
Medical and Paramedical Staff | 2 | ||
The Core Team | 3 | ||
Infrastructure (OTs, ICU, Wards, OPDs, Offices), Equipment, Instruments | 4 | ||
Pediatric Liver Transplantation | 4 | ||
Getting Recognized As A Transplant Center By The Appropriate Authority | 5 | ||
Getting Started-The First Few Cases | 6 | ||
Academics And Research | 6 | ||
Supportive Hospital Management | 6 | ||
Summary | 7 | ||
Liver Transplantation in India | 8 | ||
The Idealistic Beginnings | 8 | ||
The Stuttering Start | 10 | ||
The Current Scene | 11 | ||
The Early Days | 15 | ||
Initial Hurdles | 16 | ||
Current Status and Achievemenents | 16 | ||
Patient Care | 16 | ||
Our Experience | 19 | ||
Evaluation Protocol | 19 | ||
Recipient Selection (Table 1) | 19 | ||
Donor Selection | 20 | ||
Operative Protocol | 20 | ||
Live Donor Right Lobe Retrieval | 20 | ||
Bench Procedure and Implantation | 22 | ||
Post-transplant Management | 22 | ||
Outcome | 22 | ||
Milestones in Liver Transplantation | 24 | ||
Innovations | 25 | ||
Extended Criteria Living Donors | 25 | ||
Weight Modification for Increasing the Donor Pool | 26 | ||
Domino Liver Transplant | 26 | ||
Training, Academics and Research | 26 | ||
The Future | 27 | ||
Introduction: Felt Need | 29 | ||
Phase I: Initial Years (1998-2005) | 29 | ||
Setbacks and Success | 30 | ||
Phase Ii: Phase of Consolidation (2006-2009) | 30 | ||
Phase Ii: Curent Phase (2010 Onwards) | 31 | ||
The Future | 32 | ||
Recipient Hepatectomy | 35 | ||
Hepatic Artery Thrombosis | 36 | ||
Biliary Leaks | 36 | ||
Donor Morbidity | 36 | ||
The Middle Hepatic Vein | 37 | ||
Small-for-Size Syndrome (SFSS) | 37 | ||
Post-transplant Infection | 38 | ||
The History\r | 8 | ||
Our Journey Of Livertransplantation At Sir Gangaram And Medanta Hospitals:A Rewarding Decade Of Trialsand Tribulations\r | 15 | ||
The Apollo, Delhi Journey\r | 29 | ||
Experience At Amritainstitute Of Medical Sciences,Kochi, Kerala\r | 34 | ||
Experience At Apollo, Chennai\r | 41 | ||
The Cadaver Transplant Scenarioin South India: The Globalhospital Experience\r | 47 | ||
Deceased Donor Livertransplantation In The Indianarmed Forces: Current Status\r | 50 | ||
Liver Transplantation Inindia - The Way Forward\r | 69 | ||
Liver Transplantation for Hepatocellular Carcinoma | 77a | ||
The Milan Criteria | 78 | ||
Beyond Milan | 79 | ||
Beyond Tumor Size and Number | 80 | ||
Living Donor Liver Transplantation For Hepatocellular Carcinoma | 81 | ||
Beyond the Criteria | 82 | ||
Ethics of Living Donor Liver Tranplantation for Hepatocellular Carcinoma | 83 | ||
Immunosuppression after Liver Transplantation for Hepatocellular Carcinoma | 84 | ||
Summary | 86 | ||
Liver Transplantation for Acute Liver Failure | 89a | ||
Etiology of acute liver failure: Adults and children | 90 | ||
Adults | 90 | ||
Children | 90 | ||
Principles Of Management | 90 | ||
Liver Transplantation For Acute Liver Failure | 91 | ||
Surgical Options | 91 | ||
Deceased Donor Liver Transplant | 91 | ||
Auxiliary Liver Transplant | 92 | ||
Living Donor Liver Transplantation | 93 | ||
Hepatocyte Transplantation | 96 | ||
Who Needs Liver Transplantation for Acute Liver Failure? | 96 | ||
When Not to Transplant? | 98 | ||
Post-transplant Issues | 98 | ||
Neurological Issues | 98 | ||
Psychosocial Issues | 99 | ||
Infection | 99 | ||
Renal Dysfunction | 99 | ||
Hematologic Issues | 100 | ||
Outcomes Of Liver Transplantation For Acute Liver Failure | 100 | ||
Short-Term Outcomes | 100 | ||
Long-Term Outcomes | 100 | ||
Quality Of Life After Liver Transplantation For Acute Liver Failure | 101 | ||
Future Perspectives | 101 | ||
Postoperative Complications after Liver Transplant | 107a | ||
Vascular Complications | 108 | ||
Hepatic Artery Thrombosis | 108 | ||
Hepatic Artery Stenosis | 111 | ||
Portal Vein Thrombosis and Stenosis | 111 | ||
Hepatic Vein/Caval Complications | 113 | ||
Biliary Complications | 115 | ||
Bile Leak | 115 | ||
Biliary Stricture | 116 | ||
Wound Complications | 118 | ||
Post-transplant medical complication | 118 | ||
Non-technical Graft Dysfunction | 118 | ||
Primary Non-function (PNF) | 119 | ||
Rejection | 120 | ||
Small-for-size Syndrome (SFS) | 120 | ||
Neurological Complications | 121 | ||
Pulmonary Complications | 124 | ||
Renal Complications | 125 | ||
Infectious Complications | 126 | ||
Technical Advances in Liver Transplantation | 132a | ||
Anatomical Considerations | 133 | ||
Ex Situ Technique | 133 | ||
In Situ Split Technique | 134 | ||
Full-Left Full-Right Split | 134 | ||
Conclusion | 136 | ||
Etiology And Indications | 138 | ||
Evaluation, Pretransplant Preparation, Organ Allocation | 140 | ||
Operative Details | 141 | ||
Donor Operation: Organ Retrieval and Modifications | 141 | ||
Recipient Operation: Total Hepatectomy | 141 | ||
Graft Implantation | 143 | ||
Postoperative Management | 143 | ||
Postoperative Complications | 144 | ||
Infections | 144 | ||
Vascular Complications | 144 | ||
Hepatic Artery Thrombosis (HAT) | 145 | ||
Portal Vein Thrombosis (PVT) | 146 | ||
Hepatic Venous Occlusion (HVO) | 146 | ||
Biliary Complications | 146 | ||
Allograft Rejection | 146 | ||
Survival | 147 | ||
Our Experience | 148 | ||
Follow-up, Growth, Development, Quality of Life, Compliance | 148 | ||
Withdrawal and Tolerance | 149 | ||
Laparoscopic Live Donor Left Lateral Sectionectomy | 153 | ||
Operative Procedure | 153 | ||
Comparison Study (Laparoscopy Surgery vs. Open Surgery) | 154 | ||
Laparoscopy-Assisted Live Donor Hepatectomy | 156 | ||
Laparoscopy-Assisted Live Donor Right Hepatectomy | 157 | ||
Operative Procedure | 157 | ||
Comparison Study (Laparoscopy-Assisted Surgery vs. Open Surgery) | 162 | ||
Split Liver Transplantation\r | 132a | ||
Pediatric Liver Transplantation\r | 137a | ||
Laparoscopic Live Donorhepatectomy\r | 152a |