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Response of Cardiovascular Parameters to Physical Therapy Post Liver Transplantation

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Liver Transplant; Complications
Interventions
Procedure: 6 minute walk test , Blood pressure monitoring
Registration Number
NCT05514743
Lead Sponsor
General Committee of Teaching Hospitals and Institutes, Egypt
Brief Summary

Liver transplantation (LT) is the only life-saving treatment option in patients with advanced liver disease. Deceased-donor LT is not frequent but is increasing in Asian countries. Because current liver allocation policies follow the severity principle wherein patients at highest risk for mortality receive top priority, anesthesiologists may face severely ill patients more frequently with deceased-donor LT than with living-donor LT. In this regard, with the outstanding surgical success of recent LT, cardiovascular complications have emerged as the leading cause of death after LT, particularly among those with advanced liver cirrhosis

Detailed Description

Cardiovascular complications have emerged as the leading cause of death after liver transplantation, particularly among those with advanced liver cirrhosis. Therefore, a thorough and accurate cardiovascular evaluation with clear comprehension of cirrhotic cardiomyopathy is recommended for optimal anesthetic management. However, cirrhotic patients manifest cardiac dysfunction concomitant with pronounced systemic hemodynamic changes, characterized by hyperdynamic circulation such as increased cardiac output, high heart rate, and decreased systemic vascular resistance. These unique features mask significant manifestations of cardiac dysfunction at rest, which makes it difficult to accurately evaluate cardiovascular status As cardiovascular complications are leading causes of nongraft related mortality after LT \[2\], the importance of identifying masked intrinsic cardiac dysfunction or decreased capacity of cardiac contractility due to external stress has been emphasized. However, detecting ventricular dysfunction in a resting state is difficult, as marked vasodilation and increased arterial compliance lead to latent or mild cardiac manifestations \[4\]. Different stress tests, using drugs or exercise, have been applied to unmask cardiac dysfunction; however, achieving a target HR and blood pressure is difficult given the poor functional conditions of patients with LC \[5\].

Dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE) is recommended to discriminate high-risk patients with ischemic heart disease; however, the accuracy of DSE varies widely among studies as a result of various selection criteria \[3\] and the inability to achieve the predicted target HR to provoke wall motion abnormalities. This inadequacy is based on the failure of beta receptors to respond to sympathetic stimulation in patients with LC or the use of beta blockers to prevent variceal bleeding. Therefore, the accuracy of DSE is questionable, and its sensitivity is reported as low as 13-14% \[6-7\]. Nicolau-Raducu et al. \[8\] demonstrated that DSE has 9% sensitivity, 33% positive predictive value, and 89% negative predictive value for predicting early cardiac events after LT.

The autonomic nervous system is an important regulator of cardiovascular homeostasis, and an HR analysis is considered a surrogate of vagal and sympathetic disturbances. Therefore, HR measurements have been recognized as a prognostic factor in many clinical investigations \[9-12\]. Studies showing reduced HR variability, which correlates with disease severity, central hypovolemia, and the degree of portal hypertension have also been reported \[13-14\]. Kim et al. \[15\] found that sympathetic withdrawal is associated with hypotension after graft reperfusion during LT.

Patients with LC have an increased resting HR due to hyperdynamic circulation, increased circulating catecholamines, and cirrhotic cardiomyopathy \[16-17\]. Kwon et al. \[18\] demonstrated that resting HR is associated with all-cause mortality in LT recipients and showed that patients with HR \>80 beats/min are significantly associated with a higher risk for all-cause mortality (hazard ratio 1.83) compared to patients with HR ≤65 beats/min.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Male
Target Recruitment
30
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Age ranged from 40 to 60
  2. All patients will be medically stable.
  3. All patients will have the same medical care (fluid and electrolyte management in the ICU, immunosuppressive, prophylactic) the patient might also require (antihypertensive medications, insulin or oral hypoglycemic agents, mild analgesics).
Exclusion Criteria
  • All patients will be subjected to full clinical history and full clinical examination for exclusion of the following:

    1. Patients with neurological and neuromuscular disease.
    2. Total liver transplantation.
    3. Cardiac disease.
    4. Alcoholic hepatitis.
    5. Blind individuals.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Heart rate6 minute walk test , Blood pressure monitoringHeart rate monitors can assess a person's heart rate and reveal whether it is high or low. Heart rate Trusted Source is a "clinical indicator of overall cardiac health," and it can also help a person determine their performance during a workout.
Blood pressure6 minute walk test , Blood pressure monitoringIt will be carried out before and after interventions to determine the patients functional capacity (in the 7th.day \&in the 21st.day.) It will be used as a training tool as well as an assessment tool.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Blood pressure3 weeks

It will be carried out before and after interventions to determine the patients functional capacity (in the 7th.day \&in the 21st.day.) It will be used as a training tool as well as an assessment tool.

Heart rate3 weeks

Heart rate monitors can assess a person's heart rate and reveal whether it is high or low. Heart rate Trusted Source is a "clinical indicator of overall cardiac health," and it can also help a person determine their performance during a workout.

Six minute walk test:

It will be carried out before and after interventions to determine the patients functional capacity (in the 7th.day \&in the 21st.day.) It will be used as a training tool as well as an assessment tool.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

El Sahel Teaching Hospital

🇪🇬

Cairo, Egypt

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