In pediatric liver transplantation EBV DNA load is higher in patients with a primary infection than in patients who were EBV seropositive before transplantation. The EBV PCR cannot be used to identify individual patients who develop PTLD. However, elevated EBV DNA load can be used to detect a group of patients at increased risk for PTLD.
Because of the shortage of cadaveric donors, three techniques of partial liver grafting have been developed. These techniques are placed in perspective in relation to the organ shortage. Reduced size liver transplantation (RSLTx) is widely used and has results comparable to those from whole liver grafting. However, this technique, while benefitting pediatric patients, reduces the adult donor liver pool. It also makes inefficient use of an available adult donor liver. In split liver transplantation (SPLTx), the whole liver is used after bipartition for two recipients. The results are comparable to those of RSLTx. The problem with SPLTx is that it is a very demanding technique applied only in centers with extensive experience with liver resection and reduction. Living related liver transplantation (LRLTx) yields excellent results; however, it places an otherwise healthy person at risk. It is argued that instead of performing risky operations on healthy persons, the health authorities should take specific measures to alleviate the organ shortage. In the meantime, SPLTx should be developed further because of its optimal use of donor tissue. As for LRLTx, its excellent results and the present shortage of size-matched pediatric liver donors justify its use, at least for now.
Despite the availability of Doppler ultrasound, angiography still forms part of the protocol for evaluating children after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) at our department. To investigate whether Doppler ultrasound is a reliable method for evaluating the patency of the hepatic artery, portal vein, inferior vena cava, and the anastomotic site of the portal vein in children after OLT, we performed a prospective study in which Doppler ultrasound was compared with angiography in 38 children with 40 transplants (ten examinations on clinical demand and 49 examinations according to protocol). Good correlation was found in relation to demonstrating a patent hepatic artery (sensitivity 96% and specificity 100%). Two false-negative Doppler ultrasound results were attributable to technical difficulties and rejection. For evaluating the patency of the portal vein, Doppler ultrasound agreed with angiography in 58 of the 59 examinations (98%). The one and only false-positive angiography result was explained by inadequate opacification. Doppler ultrasound visualized stenosis of the portal vein three times more often than angiography. In seven children, Doppler ultrasound findings suspicious of pathology of the inferior vena cava were confirmed using cavography or surgery. Doppler ultrasound proved to be a reliable technique for evaluating the patency of the hepatic artery, inferior vena cava, and portal vein and the anastomotic site of the portal vein.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.