학술논문

Study of Pathogenesis and Therapy on Retardation of Jaundice after Hepatectomy for Patients with Obstructive Jaundice / 閉塞性黄疸併存例に対する肝切除後黄疸遷延の病態と治療に関する検討
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
日本消化器外科学会雑誌 / The Japanese Journal of Gastroenterological Surgery. 1993, 26(7):2060
Subject
hepatic failure
obstructive jaundice
postoperative jaundice after hepatic resection
Language
Japanese
ISSN
0386-9768
1348-9372
Abstract
Postoperative jaundice is recognized as a sign of hepatic failure after hepatic resection. We examined the pathogenesis and therapy for postoperative jaundice in 6 patients who underwent hepatic resection for bile duct cancer with obstructive jaundice. The preoperative serum maximal total bilirubin level significantly affected the degree of postoperative jaundice, whereas the resection rate and blood loss were insignificant. Five parameters indicating the liver functional reserve (prothrombin time, serum ammonia, serum endotoxin, arterial ketone body ratio, and consciousness level) were measured. The endotoxin was higher and the consciousness level was lower in relation to the increase in jaundice, but the other 3 parameters were not related to jaundice. Positive ratios of the 5 parameters increased with the increase of jaundice. But there was one patient whose positive ratio was only one, in spite of an increase in jaundice. This patient was suspected of having so-called intrahepatic cholestasis. Jaundice derived from liver function impairment is an indication for plasma exchange, which should begin when the positive ratios of the 5 parameters increase, and the total bilirubin is more than 8 mg/dl. For intrahepatic cholestasis, adrenocortical hormone was thought to be an effective treatment.