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Persistent unilateral right diaphragmatic palsy following liver transplantation
Author(s) -
Subhash H S,
Chen John W C,
John Libby,
Bowden Jeffery J,
Sajkov Dimitar,
Frith Peter
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
medical journal of australia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.904
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1326-5377
pISSN - 0025-729X
DOI - 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2010.tb03406.x
Subject(s) - medicine , liver transplantation , transplantation , newcastle upon tyne , respiratory system , general surgery , surgery , history , art history
TO THE EDITOR: We describe two liver transplant patients who presented with unexplained dyspnoea and were subsequently found to have unilateral right diaphragmatic palsy, an uncommon complication of orthotopic liver transplantation. Both transplant recipients were male. One, aged 64 years, had a liver transplant in 2005 for hepatitis C-related chronic liver disease. The other, aged 66 years, had a liver transplant in 2004 for end-stage alcoholic liver cirrhosis. Both patients had presented with exertional dyspnoea several weeks after transplantation. Both were reformed smokers with no prior respiratory symptoms or established respiratory or cardiac condition. Preoperative pulmonary function tests had been essentially normal in both patients (Box 1). Chest x-rays of both patients during the postoperative convalescence period showed unilateral elevation of the right hemidiaphragm compared with the immediate pre-transplant images. (Images for Patient 1 are shown in Box 2.) Fluoroscopic study (the “sniff test”) and a computed tomography scan of the chest confirmed the presence of right hemidiaphragmatic palsy in both patients. Follow-up chest x-rays and pulmonary function tests over 2 years showed no significant improvement. In both patients, the postoperative clinical course over these 2 years was characterised by recurrent hospital admissions with hypoxaemia and intercurrent respiratory tract infections, some requiring supplemental oxygen therapy, non-invasive positive pressure ventilation and invasive ventilation in the intensive care unit. Currently, one of these patients is well, apart from dyspnoea on moderate exertion. The other patient died from a cause unrelated to his diaphragmatic palsy. Unilateral diaphragmatic palsy following liver transplantation is thought to be related to traumatic crush injury to the right phrenic nerve from a clamp placed on the inferior vena cava (IVC) during surgery. The proximity of the phrenic nerve to the IVC renders it very vulnerable to this type of injury from side-toside cross-clamping of the suprahepatic IVC. In 2008, we modified our technique to avoid cross-clamping of the IVC by performing cavocavostomy, a type of “piggyback” technique that involves “side-biting” (partial clamping) of the retrohepatic IVC away from the diaphragm. Unilateral diaphragmatic palsy can reduce exercise tolerance and may place additional mechanical stress on ventilation, which could exacerbate hypoxaemia if these patients develop intercurrent pulmonary infections. Reporting on a series of patients with phrenic nerve injury after liver transplantation, McAlister and colleagues found right hemidiaphragmatic palsy in 38% of patients after transplantation, but most of the patients recovered their diaphragmatic function within 9 months. In contrast, our patients did not show any signs of recovery for over 2 years, indicating that loss of diaphragmatic function after liver transplantation may be longstanding or permanent.

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