Laparoscopic Hepatectomy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Controlled Low Central Venous Pressure Combined With Hilar Block in Laparoscopic Hepatectomy
Hepatectomy is the preferred method for the treatment of liver tumors. Since the liver is a
double blood supply organ, massive hemorrhage during hepatectomy may lead to hemodynamic
instability, prolonged portal vein occlusion and increased ischemia-reperfusion injury. In
addition, bleeding during hepatectomy, intraoperative and postoperative blood transfusion are
the main causes of postoperative morbidity and mortality. Therefore, bleeding control during
liver resection is a critical technique. Based on the fact that liver is more tolerant to
warm ischemia and hypoxia, a variety of techniques have been widely used for hepatic blood
flow occlusion.
With the prevalence of laparoscopy, more patients received laparoscopic resection of liver
cancer. Bleeding has become a major constraint, so how to reduce the bleeding and preserve
liver function has always been surgeons' concern.As conventional hepatic portal blood flow
blocking technology is more mature, the risk of bleeding during laparoscopic liver resection
mainly comes from hepatic veins in the process of hepatic parenchymal isolation. Although
Ultrasound scalpel and Ligasure have been widely accepted in the treatment of laparoscopic
hepatectomy, due to the thin hepatic vein and the high intraluminal pressure, it is also
difficult to control the bleeding during surgery. How to prevent hepatic venous hemorrhage
has become the key to reduce the bleeding . As sinusoidal pressure is affected by
intrahepatic pressure, which is directly related to central venous pressure (CVP), reducing
CVP can reduce the pressure in the hepatic veins and sinusoids hence reducing bleeding when
the hepatic parenchyma is severed. That is the rationale of controlled low central venous
pressure CLCVP) to reduce the risk of hepatectomy, which have been used maturely in open
hepatectomy. Due to the low risk of hepatic and renal insufficiency and gas embolism in liver
surgery, there is a potential risk of laparoscopic pneumoperitoneum and the risk of
laparoscopic pneumoperitoneum is further increased. Therefore, how to implement CLCVP in
laparoscopic surgery to reduce the risk of bleeding, also avoiding complications such as
bleeding gas embolism, is a clinical problem to be solved, is rarely reported. A prospective
randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be performed for laparoscopic hepatectomy in patients
combine intraoperative combined hilar intermittent (Pringle method) with or without CLCVP to
reduce the bleeding. This study was to investigate the safety and efficacy of CLCVP in
combination with intermittent Pringle.
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