A 57-year-old woman presented with hepatic encephalopathy, cirrhosis, and a dual-channel portosystemic venous shunt (PSVS). The shunt was treated successfully by embolization with steel coils via retrograde systemic venous access. Encephalopathy resolved. This new approach is considered safer than the previously reported percutaneous transhepatic route or the mesenteric venous route, requiring a mini-laparotomy.
The authors retrospectively reviewed computed tomographic (CT) scans, angiograms, and surgical-pathologic records of 226 patients without and 64 patients with pathologically proved pancreaticobiliary carcinoma to evaluate frequency of depiction, normal range of size, and causes of dilatation of the posterior superior pancreaticoduodenal vein (PSPDV) at CT. Among the patients with pancreaticobiliary carcinoma, CT demonstrated enlarged PSPDVs (diameter, greater than or equal to 8 mm) in seven patients. CT and angiography showed that the portal-superior mesenteric vein (P-SMV) was occluded or stenotic at its confluence in three patients and was normal in four patients. Among the latter four patients, localized tumor invasion was found surgically-pathologically along the right lateral wall of the P-SMV in three. A dilated PSPDV with obliteration of the P-SMV at CT may confirm tumor extension to the P-SMV. In patients with a normal P-SMV at CT, a dilated PSPDV indicates that the tumor has extended beyond the pancreatic parenchyman and occluded other pancreaticoduodenal veins or extended to the wall of the P-SMV.
OBJECTIVE. The purposes of this studywere to describethe pathwayof fluid flow from the retroperitoneal space into the pelvic extraperitoneal space on CT in vivo, to clarify the re lation between its occurrence and the site or amount of retroperitoneal fluid, and to delineate the anatomic relation between the retroperitoneal spaces and the pelvic extraperitoneal space.MATERIALSAND METHODS.Wereviewed theCT scans of 37patients with retro peritoneal fluid collections. Patients who had undergone pelvic laparotomy and patients who
Eight cases of hepatobiliary disease located adjacent to or within the perihepatic ligaments (peritoneal reflections surrounding the liver) with exophytic spread along these ligaments (three abscesses from cholecystitis, two bilomas, two hepatic abscesses, and one hematoma from a ruptured hepatocellular carcinoma, with 16 ligamentous lesions: five in the hepatoduodenal ligament, four in the ligamentum teres, three in the falciform ligament, two in the gastrohepatic ligament, one in the transverse mesocolon, and one in the duodenocolic ligament) were studied with sonography and computed tomography. The locations of underlying diseases were the inferior aspect of the left lobe of the liver (three patients), the gallbladder (three patients), and the right hepatic duct (two patients). An understanding of the anatomic detail of the ligamentous attachments of the liver and the continuity of peritoneal ligaments is important in recognizing the ligamentous spread of hepatobiliary disease. This mode of spread of disease should be kept in mind in diagnostic imaging of the abdomen.
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