Effects of the intermittent Pringle manoeuvre on hepatic gene expression and ultrastructure in a randomized clinical study

Author:

Man K1,Lo C-M1,Liu C-L1,Zhang Z-W1,Lee T K-W1,Ng I O-L2,Fan S-T1,Wong J1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Centre for the Study of Liver Disease, University of Hong Kong Medical Centre, Queen Mary Hospital, 102 Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong, China

2. Department of Pathology, Centre for the Study of Liver Disease, University of Hong Kong Medical Centre, Queen Mary Hospital, 102 Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong, China

Abstract

Abstract Background The intermittent Pringle manoeuvre during hepatectomy results in a better clinical outcome when the accumulated ischaemia time is less than 120 min. The aim of this study was to investigate hepatic gene expression related to microcirculatory modulation and ultrastructural changes in patients having the intermittent Pringle manoeuvre. Methods Forty patients who underwent hepatectomy for liver tumours were randomly assigned to liver transection with intermittent Pringle manoeuvre (Pringle group, n = 20) or without the manoeuvre (control group, n = 20). The clinical data and hepatic expression of endothelin (ET) 1 and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) combined with liver ultrastructure were compared. Results The Pringle manoeuvre resulted in less blood loss (8·9 versus 12·4 ml/cm2; P = 0·034), a shorter transection time (2·7 versus 4·1 min/cm2; P = 0·015) and a lower serum bilirubin level on postoperative day 2 (26 versus 35 µm/l; P = 0·04). The hepatic messenger RNA content of ET-1 decreased by 38 per cent of the basal level in the Pringle group, whereas it increased by 28 per cent in the control group (P = 0·026). More patients in the control group showed swelling of mitochondria in hepatocytes and disruption of sinusoidal lining cells (12 of 20 patients versus three of 20 in the Pringle group; P = 0·008). Conclusion The intermittent Pringle manoeuvre results in less disturbance of the hepatic microcirculation and better preservation of liver sinusoids after hepatectomy.

Funder

Research Grant Council, Hong Kong

University of Hong Kong

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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