Real-Time Depiction of Intrahepatic Biliary Anatomy During Recipient Surgery with Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasonography in Living-Donor Liver Transplantation.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND In living-donor liver transplantation, biliary complications are considered an Achilles' heel. Consequently, various attempts have been made to reduce their incidence, and multiple innovations in surgical techniques have been reported. We herein report a case involving an intraoperative ultrasound cholangiogram in the recipient's abdominal cavity after reperfusion of the graft. CASE REPORT A 39-year-old male patient with decompensated alcoholic liver cirrhosis was admitted to our hospital for living-donor liver transplantation. The donor was his younger brother. Preoperative magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography revealed no evidence of biliary anatomical variance; this could have been problematic when donating the left lobe graft. Intraoperative cholangiography showed that the left hepatic duct was sufficiently long for division, guaranteeing donor safety. Back-table observation of the bile duct revealed 3 orifices; of these, the central orifice was very small, and the corresponding bile duct was not evident on intraoperative cholangiography in donor surgery. After an injection of perfluorobutane microbubbles (Sonazoid) diluted 1000-fold into the small central orifice, the bile duct of segment 4 (B4) was clearly visualized with an intraoperative ultrasound cholangiogram. The off-label use of Sonazoid was approved by Nagasaki University Hospital. Based on this finding, we determined that all 3 openings required reconstruction and reconstructed them using a telescope reconstruction method. CONCLUSIONS We verified that intraoperative ultrasound cholangiogram is useful as a tool to confirm the anatomy of the bile duct when it is not revealed through other evaluation techniques; hence, it is a method that transplant surgeons should be familiar with.
期刊介绍:
American Journal of Case Reports is an international, peer-reviewed scientific journal that publishes single and series case reports in all medical fields. American Journal of Case Reports is issued on a continuous basis as a primary electronic journal. Print copies of a single article or a set of articles can be ordered on demand.