Decline in Survival After Liver Transplantation
- 1 July 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 115 (7) , 815-819
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1980.01380070009002
Abstract
• Twenty-three recent cases of orthotopic liver transplantation were individually reviewed in an effort to determine why survival had declined from the 50% one-year survival rate of an immediately precedent series. In the series of 23, only six (26%) achieved one-year survival. Faulty case selection, technical complications, the use of damaged organs, and complications of immunosuppression were the main causes of death. Attention was directed to the possible use of preoperative lymphoid depletion to improve the effectiveness and safety of immunosuppression. (Arch Surg115:815-819, 1980)This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Thoracic Duct Fistula and Renal TransplantationAnnals of Surgery, 1979
- Fifteen years of clinical liver transplantationGastroenterology, 1979
- THORACIC-DUCT DRAINAGE BEFORE AND AFTER CADAVERIC KIDNEY-TRANSPLANTATION1979
- Liver transplantationCurrent Problems in Surgery, 1979