Two hundred and thirty-two patients subjected to open-heart surgery have been analysed regarding early post-operative jaundice. The overall incidence of jaundice was 13%, being 55% where the mitral valve and 5% where the aortic valve was predominantly involved. Only one out of 59 patients in whom a congenital lesion was repaired became jaundiced. Hyperbilirubinaemia without jaundice was common. The biochemical pattern of the jaundice was singularly constant, the most striking feature being the rise in serum bilirubin level. The highest value occurred between the second and tenth post-operative days. At total levels less than about 4 mg. /100 ml. the unconjugated fraction usually equalled or exceeded the conjugated. The alkaline phosphatase was normal in the first post-operative week but was sometimes slightly raised in the second, when the bilirubin levels were usually falling. The S.G.P.T. was normal or very slightly raised. Bilirubinuria was present. Centrilobular congestion with no evidence of extrahepatic biliary obstruction was found at post-mortem examination, and liver biopsy in three very severely jaundiced patients revealed only intrahepatic cholestasis. Pre-operative evidence of liver dysfunction was found in 13 patients who subsequently became jaundiced. Twelve had lesions predominantly affecting the mitral valve. Haemolysis, heart failure, and infection probably all played a part, and the effect of operation per se on liver function has been discussed. Drugs and viral hepatitis do not seem implicated in our patients. Maintenance of lower venous pressures in the post-operative period and the use of less blood reduced both the incidence and severity of jaundice.
6 Wood R. The quest for a really child-safe closure system. Manufacturing Chemist 1973 ;44 :22-5. 7Carter SJ, reviser. Containers and closures. Cooper and Gunn's dispensing for pharmaceutical students. 12th ed. London: Pitman, 1979:13. 8 British Standards Institute. Test for mechanical strength. BS 1679 part 4. Appendix C.
All blood donors in Scotland who were found to be infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) in the first 6 months of routine testing of all donations for anti-HCV were contacted. Those who attended were counselled, a history of exposure to risk was sought, and blood was taken for alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level as a measure of liver function. The epidemiological features were then correlated with the virological findings and ALT. In the period under study between September 1991 and February 1992, 180,658 blood donors attended. The prevalence of HCV infection was 0.088%. Of the 151 donors who attended for counselling, 101 (68%) were male. Intravenous drug use was the most common risk activity (39%), followed by previous blood transfusion (15.2%), other parenteral exposure (11.2%) and heterosexual contact with a parenterally infected partner (8.6%); 29.1% of donors gave no history of possible exposure. Elevated ALT levels were found in 59%. ALT levels were higher in donors with HCV types 1 and 3 than in HCV type 2 or non-viraemic donors. The prevalence of HCV in Scottish blood donors is thus relatively low. This may relate to the effectiveness of donor selection procedures, but donors with risk activities which should debar them continue to donate. The combination of ALT and PCR appears to be useful in counselling and assessing infected donors.
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