Albumin mass balance and kinetics in liver transplantation

Abstract Background In major abdominal surgery albumin is shifted from the circulation, presumably leaking into the interstitial space, contributing to a 30–40% decrease in plasma albumin concentration. During and after liver transplantation exogenous albumin is infused for volume substitution and t...

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Main Authors: Mariam Amouzandeh, Greg Nowak, Anna Januszkiewicz, Jan Wernerman, Olav Rooyackers, Åke Norberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-06-01
Series:Critical Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13054-018-2053-6
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spelling doaj-e37c441391ea417cbecbb5e0e6fe0fec2020-11-24T22:15:14ZengBMCCritical Care1364-85352018-06-0122111010.1186/s13054-018-2053-6Albumin mass balance and kinetics in liver transplantationMariam Amouzandeh0Greg Nowak1Anna Januszkiewicz2Jan Wernerman3Olav Rooyackers4Åke Norberg5Perioperative Medicine and Intensive Care, B31, Karolinska University HospitalDepartment of Clinical Science Intervention and Technology (CLINTEC), Karolinska Institutet, HälsovägenPerioperative Medicine and Intensive Care, B31, Karolinska University HospitalPerioperative Medicine and Intensive Care, B31, Karolinska University HospitalPerioperative Medicine and Intensive Care, B31, Karolinska University HospitalPerioperative Medicine and Intensive Care, B31, Karolinska University HospitalAbstract Background In major abdominal surgery albumin is shifted from the circulation, presumably leaking into the interstitial space, contributing to a 30–40% decrease in plasma albumin concentration. During and after liver transplantation exogenous albumin is infused for volume substitution and to maintain plasma albumin concentration. Here we used liver transplantation as a model procedure for the study of albumin mass balance and kinetics during major abdominal surgery with albumin substitution. Methods Patients were studied during liver transplantation (n = 16), and until postoperative day 3 (POD 3) (n = 11). Cumulative perioperative albumin shift was assessed by mass balance of albumin and hemoglobin. Synthesis rates of albumin and fibrinogen were estimated by the flooding technique using deuterium-labeled phenylalanine. Albumin distribution was assessed by radioiodinated human serum albumin. Results At the end of surgery, 37 ± 17 g of albumin (p < 0.0001) had shifted from plasma, and this amount was stable until POD 3 (48 ± 33 g, p = 0.0017 versus baseline). There was 91 ± 37 g exogenous albumin infused peroperatively and another 47 ± 35 g was infused postoperatively until POD 3. Absolute synthesis rates of albumin and fibrinogen on POD 3 were 239 ± 84 mg/kg body weight/day and 33 mg/kg body weight/day (range 5–161), respectively. Conclusions Albumin net leakage from plasma progressed until the end of surgery, and was then unaltered until POD 3. This is in contrast with the normalization of the cumulative albumin shift identified at day 3 after non-transplant major abdominal surgery. Liver synthesis of export proteins was high compared to reference values at the third postoperative day, suggesting rapid recovery of synthesis capacity. Trial registration Swedish Medical Product Agency, EudraCT 2015-002568-18. Registered on 15 July 2015.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13054-018-2053-6AlbuminFibrinogenCapillary leakageLiver transplantationSynthesisMass balance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mariam Amouzandeh
Greg Nowak
Anna Januszkiewicz
Jan Wernerman
Olav Rooyackers
Åke Norberg
spellingShingle Mariam Amouzandeh
Greg Nowak
Anna Januszkiewicz
Jan Wernerman
Olav Rooyackers
Åke Norberg
Albumin mass balance and kinetics in liver transplantation
Critical Care
Albumin
Fibrinogen
Capillary leakage
Liver transplantation
Synthesis
Mass balance
author_facet Mariam Amouzandeh
Greg Nowak
Anna Januszkiewicz
Jan Wernerman
Olav Rooyackers
Åke Norberg
author_sort Mariam Amouzandeh
title Albumin mass balance and kinetics in liver transplantation
title_short Albumin mass balance and kinetics in liver transplantation
title_full Albumin mass balance and kinetics in liver transplantation
title_fullStr Albumin mass balance and kinetics in liver transplantation
title_full_unstemmed Albumin mass balance and kinetics in liver transplantation
title_sort albumin mass balance and kinetics in liver transplantation
publisher BMC
series Critical Care
issn 1364-8535
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Abstract Background In major abdominal surgery albumin is shifted from the circulation, presumably leaking into the interstitial space, contributing to a 30–40% decrease in plasma albumin concentration. During and after liver transplantation exogenous albumin is infused for volume substitution and to maintain plasma albumin concentration. Here we used liver transplantation as a model procedure for the study of albumin mass balance and kinetics during major abdominal surgery with albumin substitution. Methods Patients were studied during liver transplantation (n = 16), and until postoperative day 3 (POD 3) (n = 11). Cumulative perioperative albumin shift was assessed by mass balance of albumin and hemoglobin. Synthesis rates of albumin and fibrinogen were estimated by the flooding technique using deuterium-labeled phenylalanine. Albumin distribution was assessed by radioiodinated human serum albumin. Results At the end of surgery, 37 ± 17 g of albumin (p < 0.0001) had shifted from plasma, and this amount was stable until POD 3 (48 ± 33 g, p = 0.0017 versus baseline). There was 91 ± 37 g exogenous albumin infused peroperatively and another 47 ± 35 g was infused postoperatively until POD 3. Absolute synthesis rates of albumin and fibrinogen on POD 3 were 239 ± 84 mg/kg body weight/day and 33 mg/kg body weight/day (range 5–161), respectively. Conclusions Albumin net leakage from plasma progressed until the end of surgery, and was then unaltered until POD 3. This is in contrast with the normalization of the cumulative albumin shift identified at day 3 after non-transplant major abdominal surgery. Liver synthesis of export proteins was high compared to reference values at the third postoperative day, suggesting rapid recovery of synthesis capacity. Trial registration Swedish Medical Product Agency, EudraCT 2015-002568-18. Registered on 15 July 2015.
topic Albumin
Fibrinogen
Capillary leakage
Liver transplantation
Synthesis
Mass balance
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13054-018-2053-6
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AT olavrooyackers albuminmassbalanceandkineticsinlivertransplantation
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