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“Of all the medical treatments carried out in hospitals, hyperbaric oxygen treatment is one of the most benign when it comes to side effects.” 

Research & Guidance

Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy and Liver Transplantation

V. Muralidharan, PhD, FRACS., and Professor C. Christophi, MD, FRACS, FACS, FRCS.
University of Melbourne Department of Surgery, Austin Hospital, Melbourne, Australia
HPB, 2007; 9: 174-182

Summary:
Liver transplantation is the treatment of choice for end stage liver disease and is often used for primary liver malignancies. The main limitation of its wider application is the availability of suitable donor organs. The use of marginal donor organs, split-liver transplantation and living-related liver transplantation techniques contribute to increase the donor pool. However, the use of these techniques is associated with a higher risk of post transplantation organ dysfunction, predominantly due to ischaemia, preservation and reperfusion injury (IPRI). A number of studies have demonstrated that hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) therapy influences IPRI and consequential acute cellular rejection. This article reviews the rationale of HBO therapy in the field of transplantation with particular emphasis on liver transplantation.

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