The Nebraska Medical Center performs
several types of transplant surgeries involving the small bowel
alone or with other organs. These include:
• small bowel alone
• small bowel and liver
• multi-organ transplant (small bowel, liver, pancreas and stomach)
Transplant candidates will undergo an evaluation
process that includes various tests, radiology and consults with
our transplant team. The team will be available to answer your
questions about the transplant process and will help you make an
informed decision about whether a transplant is right for you.
About Small
Bowel and Small Bowel/Liver Transplants
Isolated small bowel transplants and combined small bowel/liver transplants
are still considered investigational treatments for adult and pediatric
patients with short bowel syndrome and short bowel syndrome complicated
by concomitant liver failure, usually secondary to chronic total parenteral
nutrition (TPN), respectively. This is due to the complexity of the surgery
and the fact that so few centers in the country perform these types of
transplants. The Nebraska Medical Center became one of the first hospitals
in the country to perform this sophisticated surgery in 1993. We are
one of eight transplant centers in the country that is Medicare-approved
to perform small bowel transplants.
The following factors help determine whether
a patient should be considered for these procedures:
• the morbidity and mortality of untreated patients in similar clinical
condition over the period in which the procedure has been performed;
- how often the
procedure has been performed, where it has been performed,
and the success or failure of the procedure as measured by
the morbidity and mortality of patients undergoing the procedure;
- the reputation of the medical center and
doctors who are performing the new procedure and their record
in related areas;
- the long term prognosis of the patients
who have had the procedure performed on them and lessons that
can be derived from related procedures;
- If the benefits are judged to outweigh
the risks, then approval for transplantation may be granted by
the small bowel transplant team.
Indications/Contraindications
for Transplantation
In patients where liver function is felt to be irreparably damaged, combined
small bowel/liver transplant may be indicated. The increased complexity
of the combined small bowel/liver transplant procedure makes it a less
acceptable risk option for patients. Contraindications to isolated small
bowel and combined small bowel/liver transplantation are listed below.
Specific Indications:
Short Bowel Syndrome
- Microvillus atrophy
- Extensive atresia
- Volvulus neonatorum
- Necrotizing enterocolitis
- Crohn's disease
- Mesenteric vascular occlusion
- Trauma
- Other nonmalignant causes of short bowel
syndrome
Liver failure
- Total parenteral nutrition
- Other Consortium-approved indications for
liver transplantation
Contraindications:
- Alcoholism (not known to be abstinent for
at least six months, if appropriate) subject to psychiatric and
medical consideration
- Active infection outside the hepatobiliary
system
- Active ulcer disease
- Unstable current psychotic disease (pre-liver
failure)
- Uncontrolled malignancy
- Severe cardiac, pulmonary, vascular, renal,
or CNS disease that would make the risk of transplantation prohibitive
- Other life-limiting illnesses
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