Literature DB >> 17013726

Significance of intraoperative monitoring of arterial blood flow velocity and hepatic venous oxygen saturation for performing minimally invasive surgery in a patient with multiple calcified pancreaticoduodenal aneurysms with celiac artery occlusion.

Masayuki Tori1, Masaaki Nakahara, Hiroki Akamatsu, Shigeyuki Ueshima, Masashi Shimizu, Kazuyasu Nakao.   

Abstract

Even for patients with multiple pancreaticoduodenal aneurysms, successful treatment with noninvasive operative procedures can be employed, if intraoperative devices are considered. A 73-year-old man, without any symptoms, was admitted to our hospital and had computed tomography (CT) scanning to examine his liver for hepatitis C virus (HCV). Selective superior mesenteric artery (SMA) angiography confirmed multiple aneurysms in the anterior inferior pancreaticoduodenal artery (AIPDA), one aneurysm in the posterior inferior mesenteric artery (PIPDA), and another in the occluded celiac trunk, all with severe calcification. All of the aneurysms were thought to communicate with each other. With the celiac artery occlusion, the right hepatic artery (RHA) was revealed to be supplied by collateral arteries from the aneurysms in the AIPDA, and the left hepatic artery was shown to be supplied by collaterals from the left gastric artery. Intraoperative Doppler echography, at the time of the clamping of both IPDAs, demonstrated a marked decrease of blood velocity in all aneurysms (before clamping, >50 cm/s; after, <10 cm/s), although loss of pulsation and a marked decrease of flow in the RHA were inevitable. Therefore, each of these two IPDAs were ligated on the proximal side to the aneurysm, thus preserving the blood flow of the pancreas head fed by the PIPDA; bypass grafting from the AIPDA to the RHA, using the great saphenous vein, was done at the same time. After the creation of an anastomosis, the hepatic venous oxygen saturation (ShvO2) increased from 38% (at the time of ligation of the IPDAs) to 57% under ventilation. The patient's postoperative clinical course was uneventful. We describe and discuss our successful noninvasive operative management of multiple pancreaticoduodenal aneurysms, done while monitoring the blood flow and ShvO2, with some consideration of the literature.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17013726     DOI: 10.1007/s00534-006-1105-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Surg        ISSN: 0944-1166


  3 in total

1.  Inferior pancreaticoduodenal artery aneurysms in association with celiac stenosis/occlusion.

Authors:  Rekha Kallamadi; Marc A Demoya; Sanjeeva P Kalva
Journal:  Semin Intervent Radiol       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 1.513

2.  Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor with aneurysms of the gastroduodenal artery: a case report.

Authors:  Karim Rebeiz; Ali Shamseddine; Ralph Hachem; Karen Brown; Deborah Mukherji; Walid Faraj; Ghassan K Abou-Alfa; Layla A Nasr; Ali A Haydar
Journal:  Clin Imaging       Date:  2015-11-11       Impact factor: 1.605

3.  Pancreaticoduodenal Artery Aneurysm Associated with Celiac Trunk Stenosis: Case Illustration and Literature Review.

Authors:  Jad A Degheili; Alissar El Chediak; Mohamad Yasser R Dergham; Aghiad Al-Kutoubi; Ali H Hallal
Journal:  Case Rep Radiol       Date:  2017-07-26
  3 in total

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