Title of article
The hepatopulmonary syndrome
Author/Authors
Loutfi S. Aboussouan، نويسنده , , James K. Stoller، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
16
From page
1033
To page
1048
Abstract
The hepatopulmonary syndrome is a triad of liver disease, increased alveolar–arterial oxygen gradient and intrapulmonary vascular dilatations. Manifestations include orthodeoxia, platypnoea and hyperdynamic circulation. Intrapulmonary vascular abnormalities, perhaps mediated by nitric oxide, cause hypoxaemia by shunting, a perfusion–diffusion defect, and ventilation–perfusion mismatching. Contrast-enhanced echocardiography is the method of choice for demonstrating pulmonary vascular abnormalities, although perfusion lung scanning is a more specific and sensitive test. Angiography is best reserved for patients with poor response to 100% oxygen and defines whether vascular dilatations are of the diffuse ‘spongy’ type or, less commonly, discrete arteriovenous communications amenable to embolization. About 80% of patients with the hepatopulmonary syndrome eventually have improved oxygenation after liver transplantation, thereby making worsening hypoxaemia the primary indication for transplantation in many instances. Nevertheless, severe hypoxaemia carries a peri-operative mortality of 30% and reliable predictors of successful outcome after transplantation remain to be determined.
Keywords
liver transplantation , dyspnoea , hypoxaemia , Liver cirrhosis , hepatopulmonary syndrome , ventilation-perfusion ratio , arteriovenous anastomosis , platypnoea , orthodeoxia , di?usion-perfusion impairment , alveolar±capillary oxygen disequilibrium , intrapulmonary shunt.
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Gastroenterology
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Gastroenterology
Record number
466203
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