AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates using a saphenous vein cannula as a safer, less invasive method to measure the transcaval venous pressure gradient in liver transplant patients, compared to the traditional femoral central line.
  • Data collected from 22 patients showed a good correlation between saphenous and femoral vein pressures, especially during the critical anhepatic phase of surgery.
  • The findings suggest that saphenous venous pressure can reliably replace femoral central lines, reducing risk and healthcare costs.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Assessment of the transcaval venous pressure gradient, the central venous to inferior vena caval pressure, assists anesthetists and surgeons in management of liver transplant recipients. Traditionally, this entails insertion of a femoral central line with increased patient risk and health care cost. Here, we assessed the ability of a saphenous vein cannula to act as a surrogate for the femoral central line as a means to assess the transcaval pressure gradient in a safer and less invasive manner.

Materials And Methods: A prospective cohort of 22 patients undergoing liver transplant underwent saphenous vein cannulation in addition to insertion of a femoral and internal jugular central venous catheter. Data were collected throughout each phase of surgery to assess the central, femoral, and saphenous vein pressures; results of a range of relevant physiological and ventilatory data were also collected.

Results: The primary outcome, the correlation between saphenous and femoral venous pressure throughout surgery, was acceptable (r2 = 0.491, P < .001). During the anhepatic phase of surgery, this correlation improved (r2 = 0.912, P < .001). The correlation between the femoral to central venous pressure and saphenous to central venous pressure gradients was also reasonable throughout surgery (r2 = 0.386, P < .001), and this correlation was significantly stronger during the anhepatic phase (r2 = 0.935, P < .001).

Conclusions: Saphenous venous pressure, provided by peripheral cannulation, provided a reliable, less invasive, and safer alternative to femoral central line insertion for determination of the transcaval pressure gradient during the anhepatic phase of liver transplant.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.6002/ect.2021.0288DOI Listing

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