Publication | Closed Access
Patent paraumbilical vein: anatomic and hemodynamic variants and their clinical importance.
76
Citations
0
References
1992
Year
Patent Paraumbilical VeinGastroenterologyVascular MalformationInterventional RadiologySurgeryLiver FunctionAnatomyVaricesVascular SurgeryBiliary DisorderAngiologyHemodynamic VariantsRadiologyHealth SciencesVenous DiseaseClinical ImportanceLiver PhysiologyDoppler SonographyLeft Portal VeinHepatologyBiliary TractPortal HypertensionArterial ReconstructionsHepatitisLiver DiseaseMedicine
Fifty-five of 353 patients with suspected portal hypertension studied with Doppler sonography had a patent paraumbilical vein. Of these 55 patients, 39 had the classic intrahepatic venous circulation found in Cruveilhier-Baumgarten syndrome: hepatopetal flow in all segmental portal veins and hepatofugal flow leaving the liver in a paraumbilical vein in the falciform ligament to join veins of the anterior abdominal wall. Sixteen patients had variants of the classic pattern: Flow in one or more segmental portal veins of the left lobe or the entire liver was hepatofugal. In addition, new venous channels connecting the left portal vein with the extrahepatic paraumbilical vein were found. Assessment of liver function with the Pugh score showed severe impairment in the majority of patients with a patent paraumbilical vein. Patients with the classic intrahepatic circulation had smaller esophageal varices than those with hemodynamic or anatomic variants. The presence of a patent paraumbilical vein did not prevent formation of esophageal varices in the patients studied.