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Clinical applicability of rapid thrombelastography and functional fibrinogen thrombelastography to adult liver transplantation
Author(s) -
Yang Lu Shu,
Tanaka Kenichi A.,
Abuelkasem Ezeldeen,
Planinsic Raymond M.,
Sakai Tetsuro
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
liver transplantation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.814
H-Index - 150
eISSN - 1527-6473
pISSN - 1527-6465
DOI - 10.1002/lt.23923
Subject(s) - thrombelastography , fibrinogen , medicine , liver transplantation , thromboelastography , transplantation , anesthesia , platelet
Unlike kaolin thrombelastography (k‐TEG), the clinical utility of rapid thrombelastography (r‐TEG) and functional fibrinogen thrombelastography (FF‐TEG) has not been tested in liver transplantation (LT). These thrombelastography techniques were simultaneously performed at the time of the skin incision (the baseline) and 30 minutes after graft reperfusion (III + 30) for 27 consecutive adult LT patients. k‐TEG and r‐TEG parameters [alpha angle (α) and maximum amplitude of the clot (MA)] were compared in addition to the assay time. Estimated FF‐TEG fibrinogen levels were compared with plasma fibrinogen measurements. At the baseline, the values of Spearman's correlation coefficient ( r ) between k‐TEG and r‐TEG were moderate for α ( r  = 0.40, P  = 0.06) and strong for MA ( r  = 0.90, P  < 0.01). At III + 30, r was 0.46 ( P  < 0.05) for α and 0.80 ( P  < 0.01) for MA. The average time required to measure MA via r‐TEG was decreased in comparison with k‐TEG [from 29.7 to 21.6 minutes at the baseline (a 22% reduction) and from 29.6 to 22.9 minutes at III + 30 (a 23% reduction)]. FF‐TEG correlated strongly with the plasma fibrinogen level at the baseline ( r  = 0.90, P  < 0.01); however, FF‐TEG overestimated the fibrinogen level at III + 30 ( r  = 0.58, P  = 0.01). In conclusion, in adult LT, r‐TEG correlates with k‐TEG strongly for MA but only moderately for α. FF‐TEG estimates the plasma fibrinogen level well at the baseline; however, it must be interpreted with caution because of its overestimation after graft reperfusion when the plasma fibrinogen level often decreases to less than 100 mg/dL. Liver Transpl 20:1097–1105, 2014 . © 2014 AASLD.

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