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LEFT HEMIHEPATECTOMY IN LIVING DONORS WITH A THICK MIDDLE HEPATIC VEIN DRAINING THE CAUDAL HALF OF THE RIGHT LIVER
19
Citations
9
References
2000
Year
The Caudal HalfTransplantation SurgeryVenous DiseaseRadiologyHepatologyHealth SciencesLiver PhysiologyVascular SurgeryThe Right LiverDonor Liver RemnantSurgeryVascular AccessLiver DiseaseLiverMedicineLiver TransplantationDonor Safety
Donor safety is the first consideration in living related liver transplantation. Left hemihepatectomy including the middle hepatic vein is a reasonable donor procedure for obtaining a large graft for living related liver transplantation. This procedure, however, needs to be modified in donors with hepatic venous variation. While carrying out donor hepatectomy, we encountered two cases showing a variant form of hepatic venous drainage comprising a thick middle hepatic vein draining segment 6 of the liver. This variation made it necessary to preserve the middle hepatic vein in the donor liver remnant. Failure to recognize such a variant would result in congestion in the remaining right liver of the donor. To guarantee donor safety, evaluation of the drainage area of the corresponding hepatic vein is a matter of great importance in donor hepatectomy.
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