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Portal venous pressure in non-cirrhotic bilharzial patients undergoing elective splenectomy, can it affect mortality? A prospective study

Journal Volume 84 - 2021
Issue Fasc.4 - Original articles
Author(s) M. Tourky 1, A. Youssef 2, M. Salman 3, T. Abouelregal 2, M. Tag El-Din 4, A. Moustafa 5, A. Taha 5, A. El-Mikkawy 6, A. Saadawy 7, A. Salman 2
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PAGES 549-556
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DOI10.51821/84.4.004
Affiliations:
(1) Department of Surgery, Great Western Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Swindon, United Kingdom
(2) Internal Medicine Department, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University, Egypt
(3) General Surgery Department, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University, Egypt
(4) General Surgery Department, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar university, Cairo, Egypt
(5) Department of Endemic Medicine and Hepatology, Faculty of medicine, Cairo University, Egypt
(6) Theodor Bilharz Research Institute, Hepatology and Gastroenterology Department, Cairo, Egypt
(7) Radiology Department, Faculty of medicine-Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt

Background and study aims: To evaluate the impact of intraoperatively measured portal vein pressure (PVP) on mortality in non-cirrhotic bilharzial patients undergoing splenectomy.

Methods: The present study is a prospective study that was conducted in Egypt from April 2014 to April 2018. Adult patients with non-cirrhotic bilharziasis who were scheduled to undergo splenectomy were included. Studied cases were divided into a survival cohort and a non-survival cohort. The main objective was the correlation between the incidence of mortality and intraoperative PVP.

Results: The present work comprised 130 cases with a mean age of 51.8 ± 6.4 years old. The in-hospital mortality rate was 22.3%, with sepsis as a major cause of death (37.9%). In term of the association between preoperative variables and mortality, survivors had statistically significant lower portal vein diameter (13.6 ± 1.8 versus 15.2 ± 1.8mm; p<0.001) and higher portal vein velocity (14.2 ± 1.8 versus 10.4 ± 2.3 cm/sec; p<0.001) than nonsurvivors. The survived patients had significantly lower PVP (13.9 ± 1.1 versus 17.7 ± 2.7; p <0.001). A cut-off value of ≥14.5 mmHg, the PVP yielded a sensitivity of 86.2% and a specificity of 69% for the prediction of mortality. The association analysis showed a statistically significant association between mortality and postoperative liver function parameters.

Conclusions: High intraoperative PVP is linked to early postoperative death in non-cirrhotic cases undergoing splenectomy. Our study showed that PVP > 14.5mmHg was an independent predictor of death and showed good diagnostic performance for the detection of early postoperative mortality.

Keywords: bilharziasis, portal venous pressure, splenectomy, postoperative mortality.

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
© Acta Gastro-Enterologica Belgica.
PMID 34965035