RESUMO
During the past 30 years orthotopic liver transplantation (OLTx) has become a highly successful form of therapy, and as of this writing it is being performed at more than 100 institutions in the U.S., and a similar number in Europe. This is testimony to the great advances achieved in this field since the 1960s and 1970s, when there were essentially only two places actively engaged in liver transplantation. Essential to its success have been the technical refinements introduced during the last three decades, which have allowed many surgeons around the world to be able to do the procedure safely. Liver transplantation is still considered as one of the most complex operations, and therefore the margin of error is small and attention to technical detail is crucial to a satisfactory outcome. This is magnified in importance since OLTx, unlike kidney, heart, pancreas and intestinal transplantation, lacks a back-up system, such as dialysis, ventricular assist device, insulin or total parenteral nutrition. Thus, the smallest mistake in the surgical management of the patient may prove fatal.
RESUMO
The effect of cyclosporine on liver regeneration has been investigated in 25 dogs that underwent an end-to-side portacaval shunt (Eck fistula) followed by 4 days continuous infusion of the drug into the left branch of the portal vein. Three different cyclosporine infusion rates were used: 0.06, 0.6, and 4.0 mg/kg/day. Control animals received the intravenous vehicle of cyclosporine at the same rate as the treated animals; a second control group received insulin, 0.42 units/kg/day. Hepatocyte 3H-thymidine-labeled mitoses (index of hyperplasia) and hepatocyte volume (index of hypertrophy) were studied in the left (infused) and right (control) lobes in each animal. Cyclosporine vehicle had no measurable effect on hepatocytes that suffered typical atrophy and moderate increase in mitotic index after the Eck fistula. Cyclosporine infusion stimulated cell renewal significantly and restored hepatocyte size in the infused lobes with a dose-response relation. Similar positive effects were observed in the right (nonperfused) lobes, although they were less than those in the left (infused) lobes. This was because of an unmistakable spillover of cyclosporine from the infused lobes, especially in the large-dose group. No sign of hepatotoxicity was detected at any cyclosporine infusion rate. Cyclosporine has a remarkable hepatotropic effect that may be helpful in the context of liver transplantation.