Ligation of accessory hepatic artery can reduce complications in patients of liver transplantation

Written By :  Dr. Shravani Dali
Medically Reviewed By :  Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2023-06-10 04:15 GMT   |   Update On 2023-06-10 06:58 GMT

In orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT), preserving an aberrant hepatic artery (AHA) can increase the number of arterial anastomoses and may lead to arterial-related complications.Researchers have found in a new study that Ligation of accessory hepatic artery can reduce complications in patients of liver transplantation. The study was published in the BMC Surgery. In orthotopic...

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In orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT), preserving an aberrant hepatic artery (AHA) can increase the number of arterial anastomoses and may lead to arterial-related complications.

Researchers have found in a new study that Ligation of accessory hepatic artery can reduce complications in patients of liver transplantation. 

The study was published in the BMC Surgery. 

In orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT), preserving an aberrant hepatic artery (AHA) can increase the number of arterial anastomoses and may lead to arterial-related complications. AHA includes accessory hepatic artery and replaced hepatic artery. Herein, the purpose of our research is to evaluate the requirement for accessory anastomosis in OLT.

They retrospectively reviewed a total of 95 patients who underwent OLT in our hospital between April 2020 and December 2022. We found seven cases of donor livers with accessory HA. The method of arterial anastomosis and details of the diagnosis and treatment of complications were collated.

Results

Among 95 consecutive patients with OLT, complications occurred in two of seven patients—patient 2 had an accessory right hepatic artery, while patient 5 had an accessory left hepatic artery. Patient 2 showed bile leakage leading to rupture and bleeding of the accessory HA anastomosis after OLT, and was treated with interventional coil embolization. In patient 5, hepatic artery thrombosis and accessory HA occlusion were treated with embolization and thrombolysis of the splenic artery and left gastric artery. During the intervention, we also found that the internal hepatic artery and accessory HA had communicating branches. After treatment, both patients remain healthy with no complications such as liver necrosis or liver abscess.

An AHA can be ligated when assessed as an accessory artery. This can reduce the incidence of arterial complications, contribute to the perioperative management of liver transplantation (LT) patients, and improve the prognosis of LT.

Reference:

Zhang, R., Zhang, HZ., Han, T. et al. Effect of accessory hepatic artery reconstruction on prognosis in orthotopic liver transplantation: a single center experience. BMC Surg 23, 138 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12893-023-02021-7

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Article Source : BMC Surgery

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