| Literature DB >> 32434562 |
Mitsuru Tomizawa1, Shunta Hori1, Nobutaka Nishimura1, Chihiro Omori1, Yasushi Nakai1, Makito Miyake1, Tatsuo Yoneda1, Kiyohide Fujimoto2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Arterial reconstruction is one of the paramount procedures in kidney transplantation (KT) and greatly important if the procured kidney has multiple renal arteries (MRA). Despite various established techniques for arterial reconstruction, sometimes, the surgeon finds performing arterial anastomoses challenging in case of MRA. In our case, the donor's gonadal vein and recipient's internal iliac artery graft were used for arterial anastomoses, and 3 years after KT, the allograft did not present vascular complications. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Arterial reconstruction; Case report; Gonadal vein; Kidney transplantation; Multiple arteries
Year: 2020 PMID: 32434562 PMCID: PMC7238598 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-020-01848-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Fig. 1Three-dimensional computed tomography images and schemas of the renal blood vessels. Three renal arteries branched from the aorta, and the superior and middle arteries (1, 2) branched into two arteries (1-1, 1-2, 2-1, 2-2) (a). The renal arteries were cut at the dotted line (b). The superior artery was cut distal to the branch point due to bleeding. Four renal veins branched from the vena cava (c). The two veins at the middle (2, 3) were cut simultaneously with the vena cava wall (d)
Fig. 2Schema and image of reconstruction of the renal blood vessels. The two arteries at the middle of the renal hilum were reconstructed using the conjoined method, and the superior renal artery was lengthened using the donor’s gonadal vein (a). The renal arteries were reconstructed into one using the internal iliac artery graft (b). The superior two veins (1, 2) were reconstructed using the end-to-end method (c). d Representative images of the reconstruction. The yellow arrow shows the gonadal vein graft. The internal iliac artery graft was anastomosed to the original internal iliac artery (e), and the renal veins were anastomosed to the external iliac and gonadal veins (f)
Fig. 3Representative images of the allograft obtained by Doppler ultrasonography (a, postoperative day 10; b, 1 year post-transplantation; c, 2 years post-transplantation; d, 3 years post-transplantation)
Summary of previous reports of arterial reconstruction using a gonadal vein
| Authors | Year | Age | Sex | Number of allograft renal arteries | Source of the gonadal vein | Reason for use | Anastomosed to | Follow-up period | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hakaim AG | 1992 | NA | NA | 2 | donor | multiple renal arteries | external iliac artery | 1 year 6 months |
| 2 | Hakaim AG | 1992 | NA | NA | 2 | donor | multiple renal arteries | inferior epigastric artery | 3 weeks |
| 3 | Chatzizacharias NA | 2010 | 28 | M | 2 | donor | multiple renal arteries | external iliac artery | 5 days |
| 4 | He B | 2012 | 56 | F | 3 | donor | multiple renal arteries | external iliac artery | 2 months |
| 5 | Uysal E | 2017 | 27 | M | 1 | recipient | inadequate artelial length | internal iliac artery | 8 months |
| 6 | Present case | 2020 | 34 | M | 3 | donor | multiple renal arteries | internal iliac artery graft | 3 years |
Pt patient, NA not available