Portal bifurcation reconstruction using own hepatic vein grafts due to portal vein anomaly of the living donor for the patient with portal vein thrombosis.

Interposition graft Living donor liver transplantation Portal vein anomaly Portal vein bifurcation Portal vein thrombosis

Journal

Annals of hepato-biliary-pancreatic surgery
ISSN: 2508-5859
Titre abrégé: Ann Hepatobiliary Pancreat Surg
Pays: Korea (South)
ID NLM: 101698342

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
30 Nov 2020
Historique:
received: 04 05 2020
revised: 22 06 2020
accepted: 09 07 2020
entrez: 25 11 2020
pubmed: 26 11 2020
medline: 26 11 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

A 57-year-old Japanese female was considered for living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) due to end-stage liver cirrhosis caused by primary biliary cholangitis with portal vein thrombosis (PVT) formation. A 26-year-old daughter of the patient was selected as a living donor; however, a computed tomography examination revealed trifurcated-type portal vein anomaly (PVA). Preoperative liver volumetry showed that the right lobe graft was necessary for the recipient; therefore, reconstruction of the portal vein bifurcation during LDLT was necessary. We planned to extract the recipient's own hepatic vein grafts after total hepatectomy, and these would be attached with anterior and posterior portal branches as jump grafts. We performed laparoscopic donor hepatectomy as usual, and the recipient's hepatic vein grafts were anastomosed on the bench. Then, the liver graft was inserted, and the hepatic vein reconstruction was routinely performed. We confirmed the alignment between the recipient's portal vein and the bridged hepatic vein graft of the liver graft's posterior branch, and anastomosed these two vessels. Moreover, we confirmed the front flow and expansion of the reconstructed posterior branch by declamping only the suprapancreatic side of the portal vein. The decision regarding the punch-out location was crucial. We confirmed the alignment between the reconstructed posterior branch and the bridged hepatic vein graft of the anterior branch, and anastomosed these two vessels employing the punched-out technique. In LDLT, liver transplant surgeons occasionally encounter living donors with PVA or recipients with PVT. Our contrivance may be useful when the liver graft needs reconstruction of portal vein bifurcation.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33234759
pii: ahbps.2020.24.4.533
doi: 10.14701/ahbps.2020.24.4.533
pmc: PMC7691204
doi:

Types de publication

Case Reports

Langues

eng

Pagination

533-538

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Auteurs

Akira Umemura (A)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Hiroyuki Nitta (H)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Takeshi Takahara (T)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Yasushi Hasegawa (Y)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Hirokatsu Katagiri (H)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Shoji Kanno (S)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Megumi Kobayashi (M)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Taro Ando (T)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Taku Kimura (T)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Akira Sasaki (A)

Department of Surgery, Iwate Medical University Hospital, Yahaba, Japan.

Classifications MeSH