Changes in lobar volume of the liver and in total hepatic function were studied in 19 patients with biliary tract cancer who underwent right portal vein embolization as preoperative management for extensive liver resection. Computed tomography (CT) was performed to estimate liver volume before and approximately 11 days after embolization. An indocyanine green (ICG) test was performed before and 11 to 13 days after embolization. The calculated volume of the right lobe decreased from 761 +/- 181 cm3 to 625 +/- 110 cm3 11 days after embolization (P < .0001), whereas the volume of the left lobe increased from 420 +/- 94 cm3 to 555 +/- 110 cm3 (P < .0001). Thus, portal embolization produced a gain in left lobe volume of 136 +/- 62 cm3 and an almost equivalent loss in right lobe volume. The hypertrophy ratio of the left lobe, expressed as percentage of postembolization volume of the left lobe to preembolization size, of the 5 patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) was lower than that of the 14 patients without diabetes (116.7 +/- 6.3% vs. 140.4 +/- 18.4%; P < .005). The ICG disappearance rate in 16 patients improved from 0.163 +/- 0.034 to 0.177 +/- 0.027 (P < .05). The improvement was especially evident in 9 of 14 post-jaundice patients, although the rate decreased slightly in 2 patients without jaundice. We conclude that right portal vein embolization can produce a compensatory hypertrophy of the left lobe within 11 days without seriously affecting hepatic function. In diabetic patients, however, a longer interval between embolization and operation may be needed to achieve sufficient hypertrophy of the left lobe.
In 17 consecutive patients who underwent major hepatic resection, 9 of whom with combined resection of the gastrointestinal tract or the pancreatic head (or both), postoperative hepatic blood flow was investigated. In this study, the patients were classified into two groups according to their postoperative serum total bilirubin level: Group A comprised 7 patients with the level higher than 7 mg/dl for more than 1 week postoperatively, and group B comprised 10 patients who did not meet this criterion. For 2 weeks after surgery, the portal blood flow velocity, the hepatic artery resistive index (RI) calculated from the changes in Doppler frequency shifts, and the hepatic venous blood flow velocity were measured intermittently using color Doppler ultrasonography. Liver volume was assessed by computed tomography to provide the restoration. Significant differences in portal blood flow velocity and hepatic artery RI were noted between the two groups from the third postoperative day. In group A the portal blood flow velocity decreased below the preoperative value, and the hepatic artery RI increased above 0.75. In contrast, group B showed high portal blood flow velocity and low hepatic artery RI. In both groups the RI correlated significantly with the total bilirubin level (r = 0.74; p < 0.0001), and the growth rate of the remnant liver was proportional to the mean postoperative portal blood flow velocity (r = 0.70; p = 0.016). We concluded that measurement of the portal blood flow velocity and hepatic artery RI can be useful for predicting postoperative liver dysfunction and liver regeneration after major hepatic resection.
We succeeded in surgically resecting a leiomyosarcoma of the inferior vena cava (IVC), which originated at the confluent portion of the right renal vein (RRV), together with the IVC and RRV, and also were able to preserve the right kidney by reconstructing the RRV with end-to-end anastomosis using the right gonadal vein. A good blood flow of the reconstructed RRV was thereafter confirmed by color Doppler ultrasonography, and the renal function was also satisfactory. This new procedure, a reconstruction of the RRV using the gonadal vein, has not been previously reported, but is considered to be an easy and effective method which enables the surgeon to preserve the normal right kidney.
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