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Hepatectomy with total vascular exclusion. Anatomical principles based on 64 dissections
Authors:J M Chevallier  E Delva  P Frileux  B Nordlinger  R Parc  C Huguet  L Hannoun
Institution:Laboratoire d'Anatomie UFR Necker-Enfants Malades, Paris.
Abstract:Intra-operative hemorrhage is the main surgical risk during liver resections. Nowadays hepatectomies for large or posterior liver tumors close to the hepatocaval junction can benefit from total hepatic vascular exclusion (HVE) involving portal triad exclusion and clamping of the inferior vena cava (IVC) below and above the liver. Anatomical aspects of HVE have been studied in 64 subjects by segmental occlusive phlebographies of the IVC, injection of corrosive substances into the hepatocaval network, biometry of the retrohepatic IVC and serial sections of injected livers. A total HVE should exclude the right suprarenal and phrenic veins. Clamping of the suprahepatic IVC depends on the termination of the left inferior phrenic vein. Clamping of the subhepatic IVC must be retrohepatic: the right lobe of the liver has to be mobilized to free the right border of the retrohepatic IVC into which flows the right suprarenal vein 40 +/- 20 mm above the right renal vein and under the superior right hepatic vein. Both suprahepatic and retrohepatic clamps excluding the retrohepatic portion of the IVC (46.6 +/- 13 mm) and the hepatocaval junction should come in contact behind the IVC without overlapping.
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