1. Living-Donor Liver Transplantation for Budd-Chiari Syndrome: Case Series.
- Author
-
Karaca, C., Yilmaz, C., Ferecov, R., Iakobadze, Z., Kilic, K., Caglayan, L., Aydogdu, S., and Kilic, M.
- Subjects
- *
LIVER transplantation , *VENA cava inferior , *SURGICAL anastomosis , *HEPATIC veins , *ORGAN donors , *DISEASES , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Background Venous reconstruction in living-donor liver transplantation for Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS) has challenges because the grafts from living donors lack vena cava, and hepatic venous anastomosis must be performed on an already-thrombosed and/or stenosed inferior vena cava. Several techniques are described to overcome this problem, and we represent our experience with 22 patients. Methods Medical recordings of 22 patients were retrospectively collected, and disease-specific data as well as recordings about surgical technique were analyzed. Results Creation of a wide, triangular de novo orifice was the main method used for venous drainage, which was used in 19 patients. The remaining 3 patients had totally thrombosed vena cava; thus, direct anastomosis to the supra-hepatic portion of the vena cava was used in 2 patients and an anastomosis to the right atrium was used in 1 patient. Conclusions Venous reconstruction in BCS can be achieved without the use of patch-plasty, and the inferior vena cava can be safely resected in selected patients. Living-donor liver transplantation is a feasible option for the treatment of BCS, considering the scarcity of cavaderic donors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF