Assessment by pulse dye-densitometry indocyanine green (ICG) clearance test of hepatic function of patients before cardiac surgery: Its value as a predictor of serious postoperative liver dysfunction

Citation
Y. Watanabe et K. Kumon, Assessment by pulse dye-densitometry indocyanine green (ICG) clearance test of hepatic function of patients before cardiac surgery: Its value as a predictor of serious postoperative liver dysfunction, J CARDIOTHO, 13(3), 1999, pp. 299-303
Citations number
17
Categorie Soggetti
Aneshtesia & Intensive Care
Journal title
JOURNAL OF CARDIOTHORACIC AND VASCULAR ANESTHESIA
ISSN journal
10530770 → ACNP
Volume
13
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Pages
299 - 303
Database
ISI
SICI code
1053-0770(199906)13:3<299:ABPDIG>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
Objective: Patients with preoperative liver dysfunction occasionally have a poor prognosis after cardiac surgery because the liver condition is aggrav ated. The pulse dye-densitometry indocyanine green (ICG) clearance test was used as a preoperative evaluation technique. Design: Prospective, clinical evaluation. Setting: Surgical intensive care unit of a national cardiovascular center. Subjects: Twenty-seven patients with preoperative liver dysfunction were st udied. They were divided into four groups depending on the cause of their l iver dysfunction. Interventions: With the patient's informed consent, a bolus of ICG, 20 mg, was injected, and the disappearance of ICG was measured noninvasively by pu lse dye-densitometry. Measurements and Main Results: The ICG retention rate at 15 minutes (ICG-R1 5) was calculated for the regression time. The patients were assessed in te rms of ICG-R15 and the cause of liver dysfunction. The ICG-R15 values obtai ned for all 27 patients were 30% +/- 16% (mean +/- standard deviation). The 21 survivors had ICG-R15 values of 24% +/- 12%, whereas the 6 patients who died after surgery had significantly greater ICG-R15 values of 50% +/- 13% (p < 0.05). The mean Values of ICG-R15 in patients with congestive liver, viral hepatitis accompanied by congestive liver, viral hepatitis, and cirrh osis were 34%, 23%, 13%, and 42%, respectively. The 6 of 27 patients who di ed after surgery had ICG-R15 values greater than 40%. Five of the seven pat ients with cirrhosis died. Conclusion: These results suggest that (1) compared with Child-Pugh classif ication, the value of ICG-R15 provides a more accurate surgical indication; and (2) liver dysfunction from cirrhosis causes postoperative deterioratio n of liver function, especially when the ICG-R15 value exceeds 40%. Copyrig ht (C) 1999 by W.B. Saunders Company.