Changes in thoracic radio density after living donor liver transplantation

Author:

Miki Atsushi1ORCID,Sakuma Yasunaru1ORCID,Sanada Yukihiro1ORCID,Watanabe Jun1ORCID,Onishi Yasuharu1ORCID,Okada Noriki1ORCID,Horiuchi Toshio1ORCID,Omameuda Takahiko1ORCID,Teratani Takumi1ORCID,Lefor Alan K.1ORCID,Kitayama Joji1ORCID,Sata Naohiro1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Division of Gastroenterological, General and Transplant Surgery Jichi Medical University Shimotsuke Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe outcomes after liver transplantation have greatly improved, which has resulted in greater focus on improving non‐hepatic outcomes of liver transplantation. The present study aimed to evaluate thoracic spine radio density in children and adolescents after liver transplantation.MethodsA total of 116 patients who underwent living donor liver transplantation were retrospectively analyzed. The radio density at the eleventh thoracic vertebra was measured using computed tomography scan performed preoperatively then annually for 5 years postoperatively and subsequently every 2 or 3 years.ResultsThe mean thoracic radio density of male recipients of male grafts had the lowest values during the study. The radio density of patients receiving a graft from a female donor was higher than in recipients with grafts from males. Total mean radio density decreased for first 5 years postoperatively and then increased. Changes in radio density were equally distributed in both steroid withdrawal and no steroid withdrawal groups for 5 years, after which patients with steroid withdrawal had a greater increase. Changes in radio density were equally distributed in both the steroid withdrawal and no steroid withdrawal groups up to age 20, after which patients in the steroid withdrawal group had a greater increase.ConclusionsGender differences may affect the outcome of radio density changes after transplantation. Given the moderate association between thoracic radio density and bone mineral density in skeletally mature adults and further studies are needed to validate this relationship between thoracic radio density and bone mineral density changes in pediatric liver transplantation.

Publisher

Wiley

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