ABSTRACT
STUDY OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of chronic hepatic disease on postoperative coagulation. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: Operating room with postoperative inpatient followup. MEASUREMENTS: The records of 153 patients who underwent elective open hepatic resection were reviewed. The perioperative coagulation profile of each patient was assessed. The postoperative period was subdivided into the early [postoperative day (POD) 0-3] and late (POD 4 - POD 7) periods. MAIN RESULTS: 68 (44.4%) patients had chronic hepatic disease and 50 (32.7%) had cirrhosis. Eighty-four (54.9%) patients had an abnormal early postoperative coagulation profile and 46 (30.1%) had an abnormal late postoperative coagulation profile. The proportion of patients having an abnormal coagulation profile peaked on POD 2, at 39.2%. Only 5.3% of patients had an abnormal coagulation profile on POD 7. The independent predictors of abnormal early and late postoperative coagulation profiles were preexisting hepatic cirrhosis [early: odds ratio (OR) 3.73(1.49 - 9.29), late: OR 6.84(2.11 - 22.21)], abnormal preoperative coagulation profile [early: OR 9.68 (1.97 - 47.5), late: OR 11.71 (3.61- 38.02)], major hepatic resection [early: OR 4.15 (1.66 - 10.4), late: OR 5.43 (1.68 - 17.47)], and intraoperative blood loss. CONCLUSIONS: An abnormal postoperative coagulation profile after hepatic surgery is common in a patient population with chronic hepatic disease.