Role of nuclear medicine in liver transplantation

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Orthotopic liver transplantation is now a very well-established technique for treating patients with endstage liver disease. Since 1967, more than 26,000 liver transplants have been performed, including 15,000 in the United States. The overall 1-year survival rate is approximately 80% and 5-year survival is 70%. Nuclear imaging plays an important role in the management of liver transplant recipients before and after liver transplantation. The evaluation of candidates potentially includes liver-spleen scan for liver volume, multiple gated acquisition scan, adenosine or stress thallium study, bone scan, and quantitative ventilation perfusion scan for hepatopulmonary syndrome. In the post-transplant phase, the deconvolution analysis (which corrects for the problem of recirculation) is a promising tool for diagnosing rejection, although its role in the transplant population has to be established. A variety of nuclear medicine techniques are helpful in the postoperative diagnosis of biliary complications. By performing a semiquantitative analysis to discriminate hepatocyte dysfunction from biliary disease and measuring hepatocyte extraction fraction by deconvolution analysis and excretion, (T1/2 values measured by the nonlinear list squares technique) have been very promising.

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