: The results of 67 transjugular liver biopsies are described. Two failures were encountered due to inability to pass the needle into acutely angulated hepatic veins. Thirty‐four patients underwent a liver aspiration biopsy using a Colapinto needle, while the remainder were biopsied using a trucut needle. The success rate with the Colapinto needle was 68% and with the trucut model, 97%. Capsular perforation occurred in three cases, but without significant morbidity or mortality. It is concluded that the trucut needle biopsy is more reliable than aspiration biopsy, when the transjugular approach is mandated, in obtaining optimal liver tissue for histopathological diagnosis.
Shape and size of the human fetal corpus callosum of a relatively racially homogeneous southern Indian sample population were studied in midsagittal sections of formalin fixed brains. Length of corpus callosum and width of its genu, body, and splenium were measured and the data statistically analyzed. Presence of an isthmus between the body and splenium did not correlate with the measured variables. There was no significant gender difference. The variables correlated significantly among each other but only callosal length and genu width correlated with gestation age. Significant absolute increase occurred in callosal length and genu width, whereas body and splenium widths remained the same. Simple regression equations to estimate the callosal length and genu width for a given age are derived.
This paper features a problem in diagnostic imaging in which a pre-transplant abdominal angiogram of a potential liver recipient shows filling of the hepatic artery via the superior mesenteric artery and the pancreaticoduodenal arcade. The routing of this unusual supply to the liver is explained by careful study of abdominal aortic angiograms and a sagittal MRI made through the aorta.
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