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Biliary strictures following liver transplantation: Past, present and preventive strategies
- Source :
- Liver Transplantation. 14:759-769
- Publication Year :
- 2008
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2008.
-
Abstract
- Biliary complications are still the major source of morbidity for liver transplant recipients. The reported incidence of biliary strictures is 5%-15% after deceased donor liver transplantation and 28%-32% after right-lobe live donor surgery. Presentation is usually within the first year, but the incidence is known to increase with longer follow-up. The anastomotic variant is due to technical factors, whereas the nonanastomotic form is due to immunological and ischemic events, which later may lead to graft loss. Endoscopic management of anastomotic strictures achieves a success rate of 70%-100%; it drops to 50%-75% for nonanastomotic strictures with a higher recurrence rate. Results of endoscopic maneuvers are disappointing for biliary strictures after live donor liver transplantation, and the success rate is 60%-75% for anastomotic strictures and 25%-33% for the nonanastomotic variant. Preventive strategies in the cadaveric donor include the standardization of the type of anastomosis and maintenance of a vascularized ductal stump. In right-lobe live donor livers, donor liver duct harvesting also involves a major risk. The concept of high hilar intrahepatic Glissonian dissection, dissecting the artery and the duct as one unit, use of microsurgical techniques for smaller ducts, use of ductoplasty, and flexibility in the performance of double ductal anastomosis are the critical components of the preventive strategies in the recipient. In the case of live donors, judicious use of intraoperative cholangiograms, minimal dissection of the hilar plate, and perpendicular transection of the duct constitute the underlying principals for obtaining a vascularized duct.
- Subjects :
- Risk
medicine.medical_specialty
Live donor
medicine.medical_treatment
Hepatic Duct, Common
Constriction, Pathologic
Endoscopic management
Liver transplantation
Anastomosis
Risk Factors
Living Donors
Humans
Medicine
Biliary Tract
Transplantation
Deceased donor
Cholestasis
Hepatology
business.industry
Cadaveric donor
Endoscopy
Liver Transplantation
Surgery
Treatment Outcome
medicine.anatomical_structure
Liver
Bile Ducts
Living donor liver transplantation
business
Cholangiography
Artery
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15276473 and 15276465
- Volume :
- 14
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Liver Transplantation
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....fe5419c4efe61eec700952b086bebcce
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1002/lt.21509