The effect of body position on compartmental intra-abdominal pressure following liver transplantation
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Published:2012-07-05
Issue:S1
Volume:2
Page:
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ISSN:2110-5820
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Container-title:Annals of Intensive Care
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Ann. Intensive Care
Author:
Cresswell Adrian B,Jassem Wayel,Srinivasan Parthi,Prachalias Andreas A,Sizer Elizabeth,Burnal William,Auzinger Georg,Muiesan Paolo,Rela Mohammed,Heaton Nigel D,Bowles Matthew J,Wendon Julia A
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Current assumptions rely on intra-abdominal pressure (IAP) being uniform across the abdominal cavity. The abdominal contents are, however, a heterogeneous mix of solid, liquid and gas, and pressure transmission may not be uniform. The current study examines the upper and lower IAP following liver transplantation.
Methods
IAP was measured directly via intra-peritoneal catheters placed at the liver and outside the bladder. Compartmental pressure data were recorded at 10-min intervals for up to 72 h following surgery, and the effect of intermittent posture change on compartmental pressures was also studied. Pelvic intra-peritoneal pressure was compared to intra-bladder pressure measured via a FoleyManometer.
Results
A significant variation in upper and lower IAP of 18% was observed with a range of differences of 0 to 16 mmHg. A sustained difference in inter-compartmental pressure of 4 mmHg or more was present for 23% of the study time. Head-up positioning at 30° provided a protective effect on upper intra-abdominal pressure, resulting in a significant reduction in all patients. There was excellent agreement between intra-bladder and pelvic pressure.
Conclusions
A clinically significant variation in inter-compartmental pressure exists following liver transplantation, which can be manipulated by changes to body position. The existence of regional pressure differences suggests that IAP monitoring at the bladder alone may under-diagnose intra-abdominal hypertension and abdominal compartment syndrome in these patients. The upper and lower abdomen may need to be considered as separate entities in certain conditions.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
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