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International Journal of Clinical Case Studies Volume 2 (2016), Article ID 2:IJCCS-113, 2 pages
http://dx.doi.org/10.15344/2455-2356/2016/113
Case Report
Prolonged Anhepatic Phase for Acute Vascular Failure During Surgery

Francisco Javier León Díaz*, Miguel Ángel Suárez Muñoz, José Antonio Pérez Daga, Belinda Sánchez Pérez, José Luis Fernández Aguilar, Custodia Montiel Casado, José Manuel Aranda Narváez, Laura Romacho López and Julio Santoyo Santoyo

Liver Transplant Unit, Regional Hospital, Málaga, Spain
Dr. Francisco Javier Léon Díaz, Hepatobiliary Surgery. Avenida Carlos Haya - s/n - 29010 Málaga. Spain, Tel: +34665965074; E-mail: franjleondiaz@gmail.com
16 October 2016; 09 December 2016; 12 December 2016
Díaz FJL, Muñoz MAS, Daga JAP, Pérez BS, Aguilar JLF, et al. (2016) Prolonged Anhepatic Phase for Acute Vascular Failure During Surgery. Int J Clin Case Stud 2: 113. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.15344/2455-2356/2016/113

Abstract

Introduction: Total hepatectomy with temporary porto caval shunt involves an anhepatic phase until liver transplantation. The severity of the patient's state is conditioned by the physiopathologic alterations occurred during the anhepatic phase and the availability or not of organs in the short term.
Methods: We report the case of a male patient undergoing liver transplantation for liver failure caused by the hepatitis C virus (HCV). Until liver transplantation, the patient experienced an anhepatic phase of 22 hours secondary to acute vascular failure during surgery. The patient is alive at five follow-up years.
Conclusions: Total hepatectomy with temporary portocaval anastomosis in combination with appropriate management of physiopathologic alterations at the Intensive Care Unit improve survival in severely-ill patients awaiting transplantation.