Background/aims: We describe the innovative techniques with single orifice vein reconstruction for the complete venous drainage in the left liver plus caudate lobe graft.
Methodology: Eight left liver plus caudate lobe grafts used for living donor adult liver transplantation were reviewed. A wide and single venous orifice was created by gathering the left, middle or its tributaries, and/or short hepatic vein using a patch vein graft or a conduit vein graft. This single, newly-created orifice was then anastomosed to the common trunk created in the recipient's hepatic veins.
Results: Of 8 liver grafts, six included the middle hepatic vein trunk. Another two included only the middle hepatic vein tributaries. Significantly-sized short hepatic veins were preserved in 4 grafts and were connected with the major hepatic veins or tributaries of the middle hepatic vein to make a single orifice using a conduit vein graft. For remaining 4 grafts without significantly-sized short hepatic veins, two adjacent hepatic vein trunks (left and middle hepatic veins) were simply connected together. To enlarge the common orifice of the hepatic veins, the patch vein grafts were further attached. Hepatic vein waveforms of all grafts showed the biphasic or triphasic pattern and the graft congestion was not observed immediately after venoplasty. No graft was lost due to hepatic venous outflow block with the mean follow-up of 15 months.
Conclusions: The short-term results of our technique were satisfactory. The present technique can simplify graft-to-recipient hepatic vein reconstruction without unfavorable tension on the anastomosis.
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