Pulmonary vascular morphological changes in cirrhotic patients undergoing liver transplantation

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Abstract

Cirrhosis and portal hypertension may be associated with pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary dysfunction. However, morphological pulmonary vascular lesions in patients with cirrhosis have not been well characterized morphometrically. We morphometrically evaluated pulmonary vessels in liver transplant recipients with pretransplantation cirrhosis and correlated our findings with pretransplantation cardiopulmonary function, postoperative course, and postmortem cardiopulmonary findings. Autopsy lung slides from 23 transplant recipients with pretransplantation cirrhosis were examined. External vessel diameter, intimal thickness, and arterial medial thickness were measured with a micrometer after pentachrome staining. The percent of total diameter comprised by intima or media was calculated for each vessel. Medical records were reviewed for smoking history, pretransplantation cardiopulmonary function testing, and postoperative course. Autopsy cases without liver or significant cardiopulmonary diseases, matched for age, sex, and smoking history, served as controls. Transplant recipients had significantly more pulmonary venous intimal thickening than matched controls (P

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Lamps, L. W., Carson, K., Bradley, A. L., Pinson, C. W., Johnson, J. E., Coogan, A. C., … Washington, M. K. (1999). Pulmonary vascular morphological changes in cirrhotic patients undergoing liver transplantation. Liver Transplantation and Surgery, 5(1), 57–64. https://doi.org/10.1002/lt.500050110

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