Welcome to the forum.
This is an old thread. Most people may not see or read your question. You will get more responses if you start a new thread and post your question. I would suggest going to one or both of the following two forums and posting your question. When you get to the forum, go to the top of the page and click on the orange rectangle, "Post a Question." Put in a subject title, something like, "liver transplant." Then ask your question and post it.
http://www.medhelp.org/forums/Transplants/show/230
http://www.medhelp.org/forums/Cirrhosis-of-the-Liver/show/1390
Best of luck.
my uncle has a pacemaker fitted and he is 78 can he have a liver transplant if not why?
they said my MELD score is on the borderline towards needing a transplant. but they say my liver is still sick, dont have any cancerous issues, or bleeding. I go and see them agin in a fortnight before that I will have more cardio tests I had some last time but this is a cardiac hospital i will have some more there than go back to the liver transplant team after the tests. Its still all just tests at the moment
So they are saying that your liver is so damaged you can't do any hepatitis C treatment. Is your cirrhosis still compensatedt? No ascites, bleeding varices, hepatic encephalopathy correct?
I don't really know the true impact your cardio issues you have and maybe that is the biggest risk factor. I wish I could be more helpful but cardio and your particular issues is not something I have any experience with. Here is the US some transplant center will try hepatitis C treatment up to about a MELD of 20. Of course this is with constant monitoring and transplant as a backup incase the treatment causes the liver to fail.
Well at least they are doing their due diligence by assessing as much as possible your current health status.
Remember you could stay compensated for many years before you decompensate and have to deal with the complications of End-Stage Liver Disease. I am so sorry you are in such a difficult situation. I really hope they find a way to list you.
"Hepatology. 2012 Mar 2. doi: 10.1002/hep.25692. [Epub ahead of print]
Congenital heart disease and the liver.
Asrani SK, Asrani NS, Freese DK, Phillips SD, Warnes CA, Heimbach J, Kamath PS.
Source:
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota.
Abstract:
There are approximately one million adult patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) in the United States and the number is increasing. Hepatic complications are common and may occur secondary to persistent chronic passive venous congestion or decreased cardiac output due to the underlying cardiac disease, or as a result of palliative cardiac surgery; transfusion or drug related hepatitis may also occur. The unique physiology of Fontan circulation is particularly prone to development of hepatic complications and is in part related to the duration of the Fontan procedure. Liver biochemical test abnormalities may be related to cardiac failure, due to intrinsic liver disease, secondary to palliative interventions, or drug-related. Complications of portal hypertension and rarely, hepatocellular carcinoma may also occur. Abnormalities such as hypervascular nodules are often seen; in the presence of cirrhosis surveillance for hepatocellular carcinoma is necessary. Judicious perioperative support is required when cardiac surgery is performed in patients with advanced hepatic disease. Traditional models for liver disease staging may not fully capture the severity of disease in patients with CHD. The effectiveness or safety of isolated liver transplantation in patients with significant CHD is limited in adults; combined heart-liver transplantation may be required in those with decompensated liver disease or hepatocellular carcinoma, but experience is limited in the presence of significant CHD. The long term sequelae of many reparative cardiac surgical procedures are not yet fully realized; understanding the unique and diverse hepatic associations and the role for early cardiac transplantation in this population is critical. As this population continues to grow and age, consideration should be given to developing consensus guidelines for a multidisciplinary approach to optimize management of this vulnerable population. (HEPATOLOGY 2012.).
Copyright © 2012 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases."
All the best!
Hector
i had asked them about clinical trials and they said being young I would like to put you on them but if we put you on the treatment you will get very sick and likley your liver would not take it and you would die.
In australia the major cities have the transplant team. I just keep going back for more tests they had hinted that end March they would go to the board and put my case forward but as they cant be sure I survive it, instead I will have more tests. I should know within 3 to six months, then I guess I can discuss what other treatment options they have, but from what they said and other cases I assume they dont think the risk is worth it.
Hi. Welcome.
First let’s think about your cirrhosis and hepatitis C.
You say that your MELD score is border line for transplant. In the US that is 15. If that is true and you otherwise healthy enough… have you thought about or tried the new triple therapy hepatitis C treatment with an antiviral? In you situation it could stop or at least slow down the progression of your liver damage. It seems worth a try even for 4 or 12 weeks to see if you respond. Have you discussed this option with the transplant center? I would think it worth a try under the circumstances.
Your question if really impossible to answer because the cardio issue(s) you have are very rare and your situation is unique. As far as meeting others who have had successful liver transplants who have had cardio issues...I would say I have meet maybe 100-125 pre and post liver transplant patients at our liver transplant support meetings over the years. I have heard from patients and family members about a few people that had cardio issues such as high blood pressure, previous heart attacks but never your situation. So I am afraid I am not of too much help.
As you know, a liver transplant can have a large affect on any cardio issues. That is one of the reason liver transplant patients are required to have a full cardio workup before being listed for transplant and before being transplanted. Obviously any cardio issues presents an additional risks to the surgery. Only a transplant center can weigh the risk vs. benefit in your very unique situation.
My suggestion would be to talk to the transplant center when they are done evaluating you. No matter what the outcome. Talk to the surgeon so that you can understand your condition in layman terms. That way at less you will know the risk vs. benefit of a liver transplant.
If you were in the US I would say to go to one of the top 5 transplant centers and see if they can help you if the center you are going too won’t list you. I am not sure how the system in Australia works. Here different center have different criteria for listing. So while one center may turn you down another may accept you.
Good luck with your cardio tests and getting listed!
Hector
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