Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Ischemia and reperfusion injury is unavoidable during a liver transplantation. Remote ischemic preconditioning, a safe and feasible method, has previously been shown to reduce ischemia and reperfusion injury. In the transplantation setting, focus of remote ischemic preconditioning has been on the donor. However, preconditioning of the recipient may be a better approach due to the mechanisms by which ischemic preconditioning protects against ischemia and reperfusion injury.
The aim of this randomised, double-blinded clinical trial is to biochemically assess the liver function after application of remote ischemic preconditioning on the recipient.
Full description
Background The use of solid organ transplantation, including liver transplantation, is the golden standard for many end-stage solid organ diseases. Ischemia and reperfusion injury is unavoidable during a liver transplantation. Remote ischemic preconditioning, a safe and feasible method, has previously been shown to reduce ischemia and reperfusion injury. This may have a similar effect in a liver transplantation setting. In the transplantation setting, focus of remote ischemic preconditioning has been on the donor. However, preconditioning of the recipient may be a better approach due to the mechanisms by which ischemic preconditioning protects against ischemia and reperfusion injury.
The aim of this randomised, double-blinded clinical trial is to biochemically assess the liver function after application of remote ischemic preconditioning on the recipient.
Methods 52 patients undergoing a liver transplantation, included in accordance to the inclusion criteria, will be allocated to an intervention group (rIC-group) and compared to a retrospective non-intervention control group (non-rIC group) consisting of 52 patients. Patients in the non-intervention group will also be included in accordance to the inclusion criteria. Within two hours before surgery, patients in the intervention group will be subjected to four rounds of five-minute inflations and five-minute deflations of a pneumatic tourniquet applied on the right leg.
Follow-up time will be 30 days.
Measurements The aim of this trial is to assess the effect of remote ischemic preconditioning on the extent of liver injury and inflammation as a result of ischemia and reperfusion injury. Assessment will be done by measurement of biomarkers relevant to liver function and liver injury.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal