Back to Search Start Over

A case of hepatic venous outflow obstruction caused by migration of the remnant liver into the subphrenic space after extended posterior sectionectomy of the liver

Authors :
Toru Hisaka
Yoshito Akagi
Hiroki Kanno
Atsushi Yoshida
Yuichi Goto
Koji Okuda
Source :
International Journal of Surgery Case Reports
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Highlights • Hepatic venous outflow obstruction (HVOO) is a rare complication of hepatectomy. • HVOO might occur irrespective of whether the left triangular ligament is divided. • The treatment for HVOO is repositioning and/or stenting into the hepatic vein.<br />Introduction Hepatic venous outflow obstruction (HVOO) is a rare complication of hepatectomy. We report a case of HVOO caused by remnant liver migration into the subphrenic space after hepatectomy, which was successfully managed by repositioning of the remnant liver. Presentation of case A 55-year-old Japanese man was diagnosed with a liver tumor on ultrasound. Contrast-enhanced CT revealed early enhancement in the arterial phase, followed by a washout in the late phase. Preoperative diagnosis was hepatocellular carcinoma, and hand-assisted laparoscopic extended posterior sectionectomy was performed. On postoperative day 1, middle hepatic vein (MHV) flow was not detected on ultrasound, and the portal flow was hepatofugal. CT during arterial portography revealed absence of the portal flow to the medial and anterior sections, and remnant liver migration into the subphrenic space. Therefore, we suspected that HVOO was caused by the remnant liver migration and performed redo laparotomy to reposition the remnant liver with suturing of the falciform ligament to the anterior abdominal wall. Postoperatively, contrast-enhanced CT demonstrated that the remnant liver remained in the anatomical position, and the medial and anterior sections were well enhanced. Discussion HVOO might occur irrespective of whether the left triangular ligament is preserved. We believe that it is necessary to fix the remnant liver to the abdominal wall in cases with poor venous blood flow confirmed by intraoperative ultrasound. If kinking of the hepatic vein persists, stent insertion should be performed. Conclusion HVOO after hepatectomy is rare but potentially fatal, and prevention and countermeasures should be discussed.

Details

ISSN :
22102612
Volume :
76
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Surgery Case Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c5a7cc4e1956fe7aa4236f09a31d44f2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijscr.2020.09.203