Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Pulmonary disease
- Part II Lung transplantation
- 11 Overview
- 12 Patient selection and indications for lung transplantation
- 13 Single and bilateral lung transplantation
- 14 Combined heart and lung transplantation
- 15 Anaesthesia and intensive care
- 16 Medical management
- 17 Immunological mechanisms of graft injury
- 18 Pharmacological immunosuppression
- 19 Chronic lung allograft dysfunction
- 20 Infectious complications
- 21 Cytomegalovirus infection
- 22 Imaging
- 23 Transplant pathology
- 24 Haematology
- 25 Psychology
- 26 The current status of lung transplantation
- Part III Future directions
- Index
16 - Medical management
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part I Pulmonary disease
- Part II Lung transplantation
- 11 Overview
- 12 Patient selection and indications for lung transplantation
- 13 Single and bilateral lung transplantation
- 14 Combined heart and lung transplantation
- 15 Anaesthesia and intensive care
- 16 Medical management
- 17 Immunological mechanisms of graft injury
- 18 Pharmacological immunosuppression
- 19 Chronic lung allograft dysfunction
- 20 Infectious complications
- 21 Cytomegalovirus infection
- 22 Imaging
- 23 Transplant pathology
- 24 Haematology
- 25 Psychology
- 26 The current status of lung transplantation
- Part III Future directions
- Index
Summary
Introduction and general considerations
No procedure in medicine depends as much as lung transplantation does on a team approach from various disciplines including surgeons, respiratory physicians, microbiologists, physiotherapists and nurses if success is to be achieved. To minimize any confusion and optimize patient care it is essential to develop standard treatment protocols and to organize regular multidisciplinary ward rounds on a daily basis.
Although occasionally patients are extubated in the operating theatre, the majority of patients are extubated between 12 and 24 hours after surgery. They arrive in the intensive care unit mechanically ventilated and the approach to ventilation is to minimize the risk of trauma whilst ensuring adequate oxygenation on as low a fraction of inspired oxygen as possible. A low positive end-expiratory pressure of 5 cm H2O is usually employed. A degree of lung vascular injury resulting from factors in the donor lung, method of lung preservation and ischaemia–reperfusion injury occurs in all lungs but the severity varies considerably. Brain death itself induces systemic and local cytokine responses in the donor lungs. A severe injury is manifest by parenchymal infiltrates and significant hypoxaemia. This may require careful ventilatory management, diuresis and the use of inhaled nitric oxide. When diuretics are used it is important to ensure that the circulating blood volume is not reduced to a degree that impairs tissue perfusion. It is also important to avoid electrolyte abnormalities and uraemia. Chest drains are monitored for evidence of mediastinal or pleural haemorrhage and if this is persistent or massive, re-exploration is required. The frequency of surgical re-exploration for bleeding has decreased markedly over the years.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Lung Transplantation , pp. 176 - 184Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003