Korean Journal of Transplantation (Dec 2021)

Corrigendum to: Deceased donor liver transplantation under the Korean model for end-stage liver disease score-based liver allocation system: 2-year allocation results at a high-volume transplantation center

  • Hea-Seon Ha,
  • Jung-Ja Hong,
  • In-Ok Kim,
  • Sae-Rom Lee,
  • Ah-Young Lee,
  • Tae-Yong Ha,
  • Gi-Won Song,
  • Dong-Hwan Jung,
  • Gil-Chun Park,
  • Chul-Soo Ahn,
  • Deok-Bog Moon,
  • Ki-Hun Kim,
  • Sung-Gyu Lee,
  • Shin Hwang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4285/kjt.21.0028E
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35, no. 4
pp. 281 – 281

Abstract

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Intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) following liver transplantation is a potentially devastating complication. Although hypertension and thrombocytopenia are well-known risk factors for ICH in the general population, their roles in ICH after liver transplantation have not been well established. ICH occurred in two patients with alcoholic cirrhosis after deceased donor liver transplantation. A 38-year-old man presented with acute ICH in the right parietal lobe on day 16 after transplantation, with decreased level of consciousness and seizure. His mental status improved with immediate neurological treatment without surgery. In the second case, a 42-year-old woman had acute ICH in the left frontoparietal lobes on day 9 after transplantation, with generalized tonic-clonic seizures. Urgent cerebral decompression was performed. The patient’s neurological symptoms gradually recovered. In both cases, the blood platelet count was less than 50,000/mm3. Monitoring cerebral pressure for ICH is an invasive and challenging method, especially in patients with cirrhosis who have issues with hemostasis. Surgeons should be critically mindful of the risk of rapid neurological deterioration in patients with cirrhosis. Careful neurologic examination and immediate treatment to lower intracranial pressure for ICH after liver transplantation in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis are very important.