# An Elbow Patch Reconstruction Technique for Narrowed Remnant Portal Veins during Right Lobe Living Donor Hepatectomy: A Rescue Surgery

**Authors:** Sertac Usta, Sami Akbulut, Kemal Baris Sarici, Ibrahim Umar Garzali, Fatih Ozdemir, Fatih Gonultas, Adil Baskiran, Burak Isik, Sezai Yilmaz

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm13102924 · 2024-05-16

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a new surgical technique to fix narrowed portal veins in liver donors after a specific type of liver surgery.

## Contribution

The paper presents a novel 'elbow patch reconstruction technique' to address portal vein narrowing in living liver donors.

## Key findings

- All 12 donors treated with the elbow patch technique had no structural or functional complications in the portal vein.
- The technique effectively relieved narrowing without causing thrombosis or restenosis.
- Portal vein narrowing was detected intraoperatively or postoperatively using Doppler ultrasonography and CT.

## Abstract

Background: Treatment of established portal vein narrowing after living donor hepatectomy is challenging. We aimed to present a new approach termed the “elbow patch reconstruction technique” to correct the narrowed remnant portal vein just or late after right lobe living donor hepatectomy. Methods: Demographic and clinical data of 12 living liver donors with narrowed remnant portal veins and treated with the “elbow patch reconstruction technique” were prospectively collected and retrospectively evaluated. Anatomic variation of the portal vein was defined in accordance with the Nakamura classification; six of the living liver donors had type A, three had type B, and the remaining three had type C. In eight of the living liver donors with a narrowed remnant portal vein, diagnosis was detected by intraoperative Doppler ultrasonography and visual inspection by experienced transplant surgeons in the living donor hepatectomy procedure. In the remaining four living liver donors, diagnosis was performed postoperatively when elevation of liver enzymes was noticed during the routine liver function test and Doppler US. The diagnosis was confirmed by multidetector computed tomography. Results: Data from nine males and three females aged 18 to 54 years were analyzed. All of the living liver donors were followed up for a median of 1710 days (min-max: 1178–4447 days; IQR: 1516 days), and none of the living liver donors had any structural or functional complications in the portal vein. Conclusions: Narrowing remnant portal veins are rare, but they are a life-threatening complication in living liver donors, and this condition requires urgent management. Image guided interventions and narrowed segment resection with end-to-end anastomosis using a vascular graft carried a potential risk for thrombosis and restenosis. To avoid these complications, we shared a technique named “elbow patch reconstruction technique”. This technique can be very effective in relieving the narrowing of the remnant portal vein after right lobe living donor hepatectomy.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** vein narrowing (MESH:D016893), thrombosis (MESH:D013927), restenosis (MESH:D023903)

## Figures

11 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11122611/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11122611