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Liver implantation

From Surgopaedia

Recipient hepatectomy:

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  • Bilateral subcostal incision (2-3cm lower if patient has ascites) with midline extension (right more laterally)
  • Divide and ligate round ligament
  • Divide falciform ligament towards suprahepatic vena cava
  • Place mechanical retractor
  • Left coronary and triangular ligaments divided
  • Reflect segments II and III to right and gastrohepatic ligament divided
  • CHA divided and clamped with bulldog (need to clamp common hepatic artery first to avoid a dissection due to preserved high flow)
  • Cystic duct and artery are divided (high)
  • PV dissected
  • Right lobe and IVC mobilised (take down coronary and triangular ligaments, and divide peritoneum longitudinally along IVC - complete separation of the posterior aspect of retrohepatic IVC from retroperitoneum
  • Now ready for removal - vascular clamps on PV, infrahepatic and suprahepatic IVC
  • Haemostasis of bare area

Veno-venous bypass:

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  • In general, indicated in patients with haemodynamic instability after clamping, with fulminant liver failure to reduce volume overload, and with nondialysis-dependent hepatorenal syndrome.

Back table:

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  • Remnant diaphragm removed
  • Suprahepatic IVC isolated
    • Phrenic vein openings ligated
    • Adrenal vein openings ligated
  • Portal vein isolated to level of bifurcation and canulated for later flush with ice-cold ringers
  • Entire arterial axis skeletonised
  • Avoid dissection above the level of the GDA - potential injury to proper hepatic artery

Implantation

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  • Create a common suprahepatic vena cava by dividing venous bridges in the recipient
  • Stay sutures for liver at opposite corners with 3-0 prolene
  • Anastomose suprahepatic IVC 3-0 prolene
  • Flush with chilled LR or UW solution
  • Anastomose infrahepatic IVC 4-0 prolene
  • PV anastomosis
    • Avoid redundant length by trimming donor PV
    • Running 6-0 prolene
  • HA reconstruction - usually end-to-end, depends on anatomy
  • Biliary reconstruction
    • Prefer choledocho-choledochostomy but Roux-en-Y biliodigestive anastomosis also permissible
    • End-to-end with 5-0 or 6-0 PDS

Split liver

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  • Most commonly a left lateral graft (segments 2 and 3) along with right trisector graft (1, 4 to 8)
  • Can also split into two full hemilivers
  • Splitting can be done in situ or ex situ