ISBN-13: 9781455702688 / Angielski / Twarda / 2015 / 1568 str.
ISBN-13: 9781455702688 / Angielski / Twarda / 2015 / 1568 str.
Drs. Busuttil and Klintmalm present Transplantation of the Liver, 3rd Edition, which has been thoroughly revised to offer you the latest protocols, surgical approaches, and techniques used in this challenging procedure. Encompassing today's expert knowledge in the field, this medical reference book is an ideal single source for authoritative, up-to-date guidance on every imaginable aspect of liver transplantation. -They have, in fact, succeeded in raising the bar yet again and making their work product even better in the third edition of Transplantation of the Liver.- Forwords by, Thomas E. Starzl, June 2015
2016 BMA Awards: Highly Commended, Surgical Specialties
"Overall, the book should be an essential requirement in all liver transplantation units and be readily available to physicians and surgeons involved in liver transplantation at all stages in their training." --New England Journal of Medicine
"This book is a rare gem - comprehensive, almost encyclopedic in scope, and highly authoritative with more than 200 medical doctors and other experts as contributors to its contents on a highly complex and detailed medical and surgical specialty - liver transplantation. It is essential to have, for anyone in this field." -Nano Khilnani, BizIndia.net
I: General Considerations
1. History of Liver Transplantation
2. Surgical Anatomy of the Liver
3. Molecular and Cellular Basics of Liver Failure
4. Influence of Transplantation on Liver Surgery
5. Organ Allocation: The US Model
6. Organ Allocation: The European Models
7. Donation After Cardiac or Brain Death: Regulatory and Ethical Principles
II: Patient Evaluation: Adult
8. Current Indications, Contraindications, Delisting Criteria, and Timing for Transplantation
9. Transplantation for Hepatitis A and B
10. Natural History of Hepatitis C
11. Transplantation for Hepatitis C
12. Transplantation for Fulminant Hepatic Failure
13. Transplantation for Primary Biliary Cirrhosis
14. Transplantation for Sclerosing Cholangitis
15. Transplantation for Autoimmune Hepatitis
16. Transplantation for Primary Hepatic Malignancy
17. Transplantation for Cholangiocarcinoma
18. Transplantation for Metastases
19. Transplantation for Hematological Disorders
20. Transplantation for Budd-Chiari Syndrome
21. Transplantation for Alcoholic Liver Disease
22. Transplantation for Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis
23. Unusual Indications for Transplantation
III: Patient Evaluation: Pediatric
24. General Criteria for Transplantation in Children
25. Transplantation for Cholestatic Liver Disease in Children
26. Transplantation for Biliary Atresia in Children
27. Transplantation for Metabolic Disease in Children
28. Transplantation for Hepatic Malignancy in Children
IV: Special Considerations in Patient Evaluation
29. Ethical Decisions in Transplantation
30. Psychiatric Assessment of Liver Transplant Candidates
31. Pretransplantation Evaluation: Cardiac
32. Pretransplantation Evaluation: Renal
33. Pretransplantation Evaluation: Infectious Disease
34. Role of the Clinical Nurse Coordinator
35. Radiological Evaluation in Transplantation
36. Monitoring and Care
37. Nutritional Aspects of Transplantation in Adults
38. Management of Portal Hypertensive Hemorrhage
39. Portopulmonary Hypertension and Hepatopulmonary Syndrome
V: Operation
40. Donor Selection and Management
41. Extended Criteria Donors
42. Donating After Cardiac Death
43. The Donor Operation
44. Principles of Liver Preservation
45. Recipient Hepatectomy and Grafting
46. Anesthesia for Liver Transplantation
VI: Split and Living Donor Transplantation
47. Imaging Techniques for Partial Grafting
48. Living Donor Transplantation in Children
49. Living Donor Transplantation: Evaluation and Selection in Adults
50. Adult Living Donor Right Hepatectomy and Recipient Operation
51. Adult Living Donor Left Hepatectomy and Recipient Operation
52. Split Liver Transplantation for Pediatric and Adult Recipients
53. Split Liver Transplantation for Two Adult Recipients
54. Biliary and Vascular Reconstruction in Living Donor Transplantation
55. Small-for-Size Syndrome
56. Minimally Invasive Living Donor Hepatectomy
57. Dual Grafts for Transplantation
58. Outcomes of Living Donor Transplantation: The Western Perspective
59. Outcomes of Living Donor Transplantation: The Eastern Perspective
60. Ethics of Living Donor Transplantation
VII: Unusual Operative Problems
61. Arterial Reconstruction Pitfalls
62. Portal Vein Thrombosis and Other Venous Anomalies
63. Combined Liver-Kidney Transplantation
64. Retransplantation
65. Clinical Management of Necrotic Liver Before and After Transplantation
66. Intestinal and Multivisceral Transplantation
67. Transplantation: Situs Inversus and Polysplenia Syndrome
68. Auxiliary Transplantation
VIII: Postoperative Care
69. Postoperative Intensive Care Management in Adults
70. Postoperative Intensive Care Management in Children
71. Postoperative Management Beyond the Intensive Care Unit: Adults
72. Postoperative Care of Pediatric Transplant Recipients
73. Transition of Pediatric Patients to Adulthood
74. Renal Failure in Adults
75. Graft Failure
76. Technical Problems: Biliary
77. Arterial Complications after Transplantation
78. Infections After Transplantation
79. Recurrent Hepatitis C After Transplantation
80. Late Complications and Recurrence of Disease After Transplantation
81. Neuropsychiatric Complications
82. Neurological Complications
83. Role of the Posttransplantation Clinical Nurse Coordinator
IX: Transplant Pathology
84. Histopathology of Liver Transplantation
85. Pathology of NonNeoplastic Disease After Transplantation
86. Transplant-Related Malignancies
X: Immunology of Liver Transplantation
87. Rejection After Transplantation
88. Leukocyte Chimerism- Meaning and Consequences
89. ABO, Tissue Typing, and Crossmatching Incompatibility
90. Graft-Versus-Host Disease
XI: Immunosuppression
91. Induction and Maintenance of Immunosuppression
92. Special Considerations for Immunosuppression In Children
93. Treatment of Acute and Chronic Rejection
94. Novel Immunosuppression of Patients with Hepatic Malignancies
95. Novel Immunosuppressive Drugs
96. Immunosuppressive Biologic Agents
97. Long-term Toxicity of Immunosuppressive Therapy
XII: Survival and Results
98. Outcome Predictors in Transplantation
99. U.S. Trends in Transplantation
100. Long-term Functional Recovery and Quality of Life
101. Survival and Quality of Life in Children
XIII: Future Developments in Liver Transplantation
102. Genetic and Genomic Potentials in Liver Transplantation
103. Liver and Hepatocyte Xenotransplantation
104. Stem Cell and Liver Regeneration
105. Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury in Liver Transplantation
106. Extracorporeal Perfusion for Resuscitation of Marginal Grafts
107. Current Clinical Status of Extracorporeal Devices
Dr. Ronald W. Busuttil is Distinguished Professor and Executive Chairman of the UCLA Department of Surgery and holds the William P. Longmire, Jr. Chair in Surgery. He is the founding Chief of the Division of Liver and Pancreas Transplantation and Director of the Pfleger Liver Institute. In 1984, he founded the Liver Transplant Program at UCLA and has been the Director and Chief Surgeon for 28 years. Dr. Busuttil has authored more than 600 peer reviewed scientific manuscripts, 55 book chapters, and 400 abstracts. He is a Past President of the International Liver Transplantation Society, a Past President of the American Society of Transplant Surgeons, Past First Vice President of the American Surgical Association, a past member of the council of The Transplantation Society, and has served on the Board of Directors of United Network for Organ Sharing. Dr. Goran Klintmalm is chairman and chief of the Annette C. and Harold C. Simmons Transplant Institute at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, Texas, and past President of the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (ASTS). Dr. Klintmalm began the first multi-organ transplant program at Baylor in 1984. The program has now performed over 4,300 liver transplants and over 4,600 kidney transplants to date. In 1999, he performed the first split liver transplant in North Texas and the first adult living donor transplant in Texas in 2001. Dr. Klintmalm is the author of more than 450 peer-reviewed and over 80 non-peer-reviewed publications, editor of 45 textbooks chapters and 250 published abstracts. He is the Editor of 5 textbooks and has served as editor/associate editor/reviewer for multiple journals. established and has maintained the Baylor Biorepository and prospective Clinical Research Database in liver transplantation since 1985.
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