2017
DOI: 10.1111/ctr.13085
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Anesthetic management for intestinal transplantation: A decade of experience

Abstract: We demonstrate that ITx can safely occur without utilizing the intensive resources requisite for a liver transplant.

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…6 An update on anesthetic management for intestinal transplantation without transplantation of a hepatic graft was published this year by the Mount Sinai group describing 67 intestine, intestine-kidney, and intestine-pancreas transplants from 2005 to 2015. 7 All patients in this group were managed with a single radial arterial line; 61.2% had a single central line, 31.3% had 2 central lines, and 7.5% had no central line (but had at least 1 peripheral rapid infusion catheter). Patients with known difficult vascular access obtained central access by interventional radiologists prior to entry into the operating room, with 53% of patients entering the operating room with a central line already in place.…”
Section: Intestine Transplantationmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…6 An update on anesthetic management for intestinal transplantation without transplantation of a hepatic graft was published this year by the Mount Sinai group describing 67 intestine, intestine-kidney, and intestine-pancreas transplants from 2005 to 2015. 7 All patients in this group were managed with a single radial arterial line; 61.2% had a single central line, 31.3% had 2 central lines, and 7.5% had no central line (but had at least 1 peripheral rapid infusion catheter). Patients with known difficult vascular access obtained central access by interventional radiologists prior to entry into the operating room, with 53% of patients entering the operating room with a central line already in place.…”
Section: Intestine Transplantationmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…After propensity matching, 367 unique pairs were prepared. In the matched pairs, patients exposed to TXA received less pRBCs (3 [0, 6] vs 4 [1,7], P = .003) and frozen plasma (6 [2, 10] vs 6 [2,12], P = .032) transfusions. There were no differences in thromboembolic events between the groups (22 [6.0%] vs 36 [9.8%]).…”
Section: Coagulation Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%