BACKGROUND: Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS) is a disease caused by blood flow obstruction of the main hepatic veins (MHVs) and/or the outlet of the inferior vena cava (IVC), characterized by retrohepatic portal hypertension (PHT) and/or IVC hypertension. In the past decade, over 3000 cases of BCS have been reported in China. This study was to sum up our 20-year experience in surgical treatment of BCS and to investigate its pathological classification and principles of surgery. METHODS: The data from 1360 BCS patients were analyzed retrospectively. RESULTS: Four types (6 subtypes) were classified according to IVC angiography and hepatovenography: type Ia (594 patients), type Ib (123), type II (292), type IIIa (237), type IIIb (112), and type IV (2). Surgical procedures included: improved splenopneumopexy (265 cases), finger or balloon membranotomy (407), radical resection of membrane and thrombus (275), IVC bypass (88: cavocaval transflow 71 cases, and cavoatrial transflow 17 cases), mesocaval C-shape shunt (192), splenocaval shunt (32), splenoatrial shunt (23), splenojugular shunt (57), mesoatrial shunt (8), and combined methods (6), including plenal-cavoatrial shunt (4), and mesocavoatrial shunt (2), splenorenal shunt (4), mesojugular shunt (2), and other methods (1). The perioperative death rate and the complication rate after operation was 3.09% (42/1360) and 14.8% (201/1360) respectively. 885 cases were followed up from 9 months to 15 years (average 6.8+/-1.2 years. The 791 (89.4%) of 885 patients were successfully treated, 61 patients (6.89%) had a recurrence, and 33 died. CONCLUSION: Surgical treatment of BCS is dependent on a correct diagnosis and classification of the disease.
BACKGROUND:Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS) is a disease caused by blood flow obstruction of the main hepatic veins (MHVs) and/or the outlet of the inferior vena cava (IVC), characterized by retrohepatic portal hypertension (PHT) and/or IVC hypertension. In the past decade, over 3000 cases of BCS have been reported in China. This study was to sum up our 20-year experience in surgical treatment of BCS and to investigate its pathological classification and principles of surgery. METHODS: The data from 1360 BCSpatients were analyzed retrospectively. RESULTS: Four types (6 subtypes) were classified according to IVC angiography and hepatovenography: type Ia (594 patients), type Ib (123), type II (292), type IIIa (237), type IIIb (112), and type IV (2). Surgical procedures included: improved splenopneumopexy (265 cases), finger or balloon membranotomy (407), radical resection of membrane and thrombus (275), IVC bypass (88: cavocaval transflow 71 cases, and cavoatrial transflow 17 cases), mesocaval C-shape shunt (192), splenocaval shunt (32), splenoatrial shunt (23), splenojugular shunt (57), mesoatrial shunt (8), and combined methods (6), including plenal-cavoatrial shunt (4), and mesocavoatrial shunt (2), splenorenal shunt (4), mesojugular shunt (2), and other methods (1). The perioperative death rate and the complication rate after operation was 3.09% (42/1360) and 14.8% (201/1360) respectively. 885 cases were followed up from 9 months to 15 years (average 6.8+/-1.2 years. The 791 (89.4%) of 885 patients were successfully treated, 61 patients (6.89%) had a recurrence, and 33 died. CONCLUSION: Surgical treatment of BCS is dependent on a correct diagnosis and classification of the disease.
Authors: Marshall J Orloff; Jon I Isenberg; Henry O Wheeler; Pat O Daily; Barbara Girard Journal: J Gastrointest Surg Date: 2011-11-08 Impact factor: 3.452
Authors: Jeffrey M Sutton; Michael S Nussbaum; Doan Vu; Tayyab S Diwan; Sandra L Starnes; Shimul A Shah Journal: Dig Dis Sci Date: 2014-10-30 Impact factor: 3.199
Authors: Naomi Shin; Young H Kim; Hao Xu; Hai-Bin Shi; Qing-Qiao Zhang; Jean Paul Colon Pons; Ducksoo Kim; Yi Xu; Fei-Yun Wu; Samuel Han; Byung-Boong Lee; Lin-Sun Li Journal: World J Hepatol Date: 2016-06-08