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Liver transplant donor candidates: Associations between vascular and biliary anatomic variants
Author(s) -
Lee Vivian S.,
Morgan Glyn R.,
Lin Jennifer C.,
Nazzaro Carol A.,
Chang Jerry S.,
Teperman Lewis W.,
Krinsky Glenn A.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
liver transplantation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.814
H-Index - 150
eISSN - 1527-6473
pISSN - 1527-6465
DOI - 10.1002/lt.20181
Subject(s) - medicine , cholangiography , liver transplantation , artery , bile duct , radiology , biliary tract , fibrous capsule of glisson , gastroenterology , transplantation
Abstract Our objective was to investigate the coexistence of vascular and biliary anatomic variants, the latter of which are known to increase the risk of biliary complications in living liver donor transplantation. A total of 108 consecutive liver donor candidates were examined by magnetic resonance (MR) imaging that included 2 MR cholangiography methods, T2‐weighted MR cholangiography and mangofodipir‐enhanced T1‐weighted three‐dimensional (3D) MR cholangiography, as well as gadoliniumenhanced MR angiography and venography of the liver. Images were interpreted by at least 2 investigators in consensus for definition of hepatic arterial, portal venous, and biliary anatomy. A subset of 51 subjects underwent laparotomy for right hepatectomy. Of the 108 subjects examined, 50 (46%) demonstrated normal hepatic artery, portal vein, and biliary anatomy. Variants of the hepatic artery were found in 27 of 108 (25%) subjects, of the portal vein in 12 of 108 (11%) subjects, and of the bile ducts in 30 of 108 (28%) subjects. Of the 27 subjects with hepatic arterial variants, 8 (30%) also had variant biliary anatomy. The association between hepatic arterial variants and biliary variants was not statistically significant ( P > .5). However, of the 12 subjects with portal vein variants, 7 (58%) had biliary variants, and in 6 of 7 cases, the right posterior hepatic duct was anomalous. By chi‐square analysis, the association between portal venous and biliary variants was significant ( P = .012). In conclusion, over half of subjects with portal vein variants were found to have anomalous biliary anatomy, which always involved the hepatic ducts of the right lobe. The association between portal venous and biliary variants is statistically significant, while there is no significant association between hepatic arterial and biliary variants. (Liver Transpl 2004;10:1049–1054.)

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