Review
Copyright ©2011 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastrointest Surg. Nov 27, 2011; 3(11): 167-176
Published online Nov 27, 2011. doi: 10.4240/wjgs.v3.i11.167
Table 1 Summary data on normothermic ex-vivo perfusion studies of donors after cardiac death liver
AuthorYrModelSummaryOutcome
Gong et al[54]2008Animal (swine)Normothermic perfusion with autologous blood (n = 4), compared with cold stored controls in HTK solution (n = 4)Improved bile production, less hepatocyte damage and favourable haemodynamic parameters
Manekeller et al[60]2007Animal (rat)Oxygenated hypothermic machine perfusion at the end of cold storage (post perfusion)Improved performance indicators comparable to controls
Reddy et al[37]2005Animal (swine)Normothermic perfusion for 24 h (n = 5%) compared with sequential cold storage of 1 h followed by 20 h normothermic perfusion (n = 5)Greater hepatocyte injury whilst retaining the synthetic function
Reddy et al[53]2004Animal (swine)Normothermic perfusion for 24 h (n = 4) compared with sequential 4 h cold storage followed by 20 h normothermic reperfusion (post-conditioning, n = 4)Greater hepatocyte injury in the sequential post conditioning group
St Peter et al[55]2002Animal (swine)Hypothermic storage (n = 4) compared to normothermic perfusion ex-vivo (n = 4) - reperfusion model not transplantRecovery of synthetic function, less hepatocyte injury and improved substrate utilisation
Imber et al[51]2002Animal (swine)Normothermic perfusion (n = 5) compared with standard cold storage (n = 5)Improved bile production, glucose metabolism and less hepatocyte injury