J Korean Surg Soc.  1999 Jan;56(1):27-34.

The Effects of Intrasplenic Transplantation of Hepatocytes on Rats with Acute Liver Failure Induced by a 90% Hepatectomy

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Surgery, Ajou University School of Medicine.
  • 2Department of Biochemistry, Ajou University School of Medicine.
  • 3Department of Anatomic Pathology, Ajou University School of Medicine.
  • 4Department of Laboratory Medicine, Ajou University School of Medicine.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Acute liver failure either after liver resection or as part of underlying liver disease is still associated with high mortality. Various treatments have been tried to improve liver function during acute liver failure, including metabolic and nutritional support, hemodialysis, hemoperfusion, plasmapheresis, and hepatocyte and liver transplantation. Hepatocyte transplantation in various forms has attracted attention recently. We investigated whether allogeneic isolated hepatocytes transplanted in the spleen would prolong survival, facilitate liver regeneration, and improve biochemical parameters in rats with acute liver failure induced by a 90% hepatectomy.
METHODS
Allogeneic male Sprague-Dawley rats were used. Group I rats (n=26) received an intrasplenic injection of 2 107 hepatocytes in 0.3 ml of Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM), and 1 days later acute liver failure was induced. Group II acute-liver-failure rats (n=24) received an intrasplenic injection of DMEM. The survival time was determined for 22 rats in Group I and for 20 rats in Group II. The remaining 8 (4/each group) acute liver failure rats were used to assess the liver function and regeneration.
RESULTS
The survival was longer and the number of long-term survivors was greater for Group I rats than for the Group II controls. At 24 hour after the hepatectomy, Group I rats had lower ammonia, lower total bilirubin, lower activities of liver enzymes, and higher glucose levels than did Group II rats. In Group I, there was significant increase in the ratio of the weight of the remnant liver lobes to the body weight.
CONCLUSION
Compared with the Control group intrasplenic hepatocyte transplantation in acute liver failure rats acts as a bridge to support experimental rats in going from acute or fulminant liver failureto liver regeneration or compensation, prolongs survival in rats with acute liver failure induced by a 90% hepatectomy, and improves the biochemical parameters, except for the albumin levels and prothrombin time. Transplantation of hepatocytes may be beneficial in supporting a liver which has been acutely devastated by a 90% hepatectomy.

Keyword

Hepatocyte transplantation; Acute liver failure; 90% hepatectomy

MeSH Terms

Ammonia
Animals
Bilirubin
Body Weight
Compensation and Redress
Glucose
Hemoperfusion
Hepatectomy*
Hepatocytes*
Humans
Liver
Liver Diseases
Liver Failure, Acute*
Liver Regeneration
Liver Transplantation
Male
Mortality
Nutritional Support
Plasmapheresis
Prothrombin Time
Rats*
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Regeneration
Renal Dialysis
Spleen
Survivors
Ammonia
Bilirubin
Glucose
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