Influence of portal vein occlusion on portal flow and liver elasticity in an animal model
Simon Chatelin, Raoul Pop (IHU Strasbourg), C\'eline Giraudeau (IHU, Strasbourg), Khalid Ambarki, Ning Jin, Fran\c{c}ois Severac (HUS), Elodie, Breton, Jonathan Vappou

TL;DR
This study investigates how portal vein occlusion affects liver stiffness measurements using elastography, revealing that occlusion can cause underestimation of fibrosis severity and potentially lead to false-negative diagnoses.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence on the impact of portal vein occlusion on liver elasticity measurements, highlighting a possible source of diagnostic error in elastography.
Findings
Liver stiffness decreases with increasing portal vein occlusion.
Portal flow parameters significantly reduce with occlusion.
Potential for false-negative fibrosis diagnoses in PVT cases.
Abstract
Hepatic fibrosis causes an increase in liver stiffness, a parameter measured by elastography and widely used as a diagnosis method. The concomitant presence of portal vein thrombosis (PVT) implies a change in hepatic portal inflow that could also affect liver elasticity. The main objective of this study is to determine the extent to which the presence of portal occlusion can affect the mechanical properties of the liver and potentially lead to misdiagnosis of fibrosis and hepatic cirrhosis by elastography. Portal vein occlusion was generated by insertion and inflation of a balloon catheter in the portal vein of four swines. The portal flow parameters peak flow (PF) and peak velocity magnitude (PVM) and liver mechanical properties (shear modulus) were then investigated using 4D-flow MRI and MR elastography, respectively, for progressive obstructions of the portal vein. Experimental…
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