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Research Article

Organ Preservation with EC, HTK, and UW, Solution in Orthotopic Rat Liver Transplantation. Part II. Morphological Study

Pages 195-203 | Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The quality of organ preservation is of major importance in minimizing the incidence of primary graft nonfunction and organ rejection. For this study a new semiquantitative score was developed that grades morphologic tissue alterations in the liver according to their frequency and severity. It was applied to assess commonly used perfusion solutions for their efficacy in preventing early and late tissue damage after rat liver transplantation. For transplantation the livers were stored in Euro-Collins (EC, group I; n = 11), histidine-tryptophan- alpha ketoglutarate (HTK, group II; n = 11), or University of Wisconsin solution (UW, group III; n = 11). Rat liver transplantation was performed with graft arterialization by the method of Engemann. Biopsies were taken for morphological examination and semiquantitative scoring during the donor operation, after 4 h of cold storage, 1 h after reperfusion, and 4 weeks postoperatively. An immunohistological bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) assay was also performed on the day of dissection to assess the rate of hepatic proliferation. Semiquantitative morphological analysis gave widely differing results in all experimental groups after 4 h of ischemia. There was less intracellular and interstitial edema, fatty degeneration, intralobular necrosis, and hepatocellular proliferation in the HTK group than in the other groups. Neither after cold ischemia nor 1 h after reperfusion did Kupffer-cell activation occur; this is known to play a major role in the development of ischemia and reperfusion injury. Furthermore, late changes such as bile-duct proliferation and vascular and sinusoidal alterations appeared less frequently in this group. The hepatoprotective powers of HTK solution might therefore be due to decreased Kupffer-cell activation.

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