High‐Flow Oxygen Therapy to Support Inpatient Pulmonary Rehabilitation During Very Severe Hepatopulmonary Syndrome Recovery Post Liver Transplant: A Case Report
Jack M. Reeves, Jessica Marouvo, Aveline Chan, Nicholas Thomas, Lissa M. Spencer

TL;DR
A patient with severe liver disease and lung complications improved with high-flow oxygen therapy during pulmonary rehab after a liver transplant.
Contribution
This is the first case report of inpatient pulmonary rehabilitation with high-flow oxygen therapy for hepatopulmonary syndrome recovery post-liver transplant.
Findings
The patient improved in exercise capacity and quality of life after an 8-week PR program with high-flow oxygen.
Pulmonary rehabilitation supported by high-flow oxygen therapy was safe and effective for managing HPS-related symptoms.
The patient still required continuous oxygen therapy post-rehabilitation due to persistent respiratory symptoms.
Abstract
This case study reports the novel use of inpatient pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) with near‐maximal high‐flow oxygen therapy in a patient recovering from very severe hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS) following liver transplantation. HPS is a rare condition where advanced liver disease alters lung microvasculature through intrapulmonary vascular dilatation (IPVD) and angiogenesis. Platypnoea–orthodeoxia (postural dyspnoea with concurrent blood oxygen desaturation) is characteristic of HPS due to redirection of blood flow to the basal lung where IPVDs are more prominent, secondary to gravity. Currently, the only definitive treatment is liver transplantation, which allows normalization of oxygenation over an extended period, typically within 1 year. Pulmonary rehabilitation is an effective intervention for improving dyspnoea, health‐related quality of life (HRQoL), and exercise capacity in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory Support and Mechanisms · Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research · Transplantation: Methods and Outcomes
