Literature DB >> 3518106

The management of juxtahepatic venous injuries without an atriocaval shunt: preliminary clinical observations.

H L Pachter, F C Spencer, S R Hofstetter, H C Liang, G F Coppa.   

Abstract

Juxtahepatic venous injuries are usually fatal. The optimal method of dealing with these injuries remains controversial, but most experience has been with the insertion of an atriocaval shunt. However, the mortality rate with atriocaval shunting remains prohibitively high (60% to 100%). The experience at the Bellevue Hospital Trauma and Shock Unit during a 9-year period revealed a 50% mortality rate in four consecutive patients who underwent atriocaval shunting. As such, a different approach was used in the following five patients, all of whom survived. One additional patient died in the operating room before any definitive repair could be undertaken. Four steps are considered essential to the successful management of these patients: (1) compression of the injury site until adequate resuscitation has been achieved; (2) early recognition that a juxtahepatic venous injury exists, as indicated by failure of the Pringle maneuver to adequately arrest hemorrhage; (3) prolonged portal triad occlusion with hepatocyte protection by means of large doses of steroids and topical hypothermia (portal triad occlusion time in the nonshunted group ranged from 20 to 64 minutes with a mean occlusion time of 46 minutes; although a transient rise in liver function test results seemed to correlate with the length of ischemia time, neither hepatic dysfunction nor hepatic necrosis occurred; and (4) extensive finger fracture of the liver to the site of vascular injury for primary repair or ligation; the extent of the finger fracture varied from 15 to 30 cm in length and from 5 to 15 cm in depth. The successful results achieved in five consecutive patients who sustained juxtahepatic venous injuries treated without a shunt serve as a basis for recommending this operative approach.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3518106

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Surgery        ISSN: 0039-6060            Impact factor:   3.982


  13 in total

1.  Hepatic vein and retrohepatic vena caval injury.

Authors:  K F Ciresi; R C Lim
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  1990 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 3.352

2.  Use of an atriocaval shunt in a trauma patient: first reported case in Hawai'i.

Authors:  Justin J Clark; Susan Steinemann; Jeffrey M Lau
Journal:  Hawaii Med J       Date:  2010-02

3.  Penetrating injuries of the abdominal inferior vena cava.

Authors:  E Degiannis; G C Velmahos; R D Levy; I Souter; C A Benn; R Saadia
Journal:  Ann R Coll Surg Engl       Date:  1996-11       Impact factor: 1.891

4.  Reconstruction of a total avulsion of the hepatic veins and the suprahepatic inferior vena cava secondary to blunt thoracoabdominal trauma.

Authors:  Daniel Kaemmerer; Wolfgang Daffner; Martin Niwa; Thomas Kuntze; Merten Hommann
Journal:  Langenbecks Arch Surg       Date:  2010-06-04       Impact factor: 3.445

5.  Evolution in the management of hepatic trauma: a 25-year perspective.

Authors:  J David Richardson; G A Franklin; J K Lukan; E H Carrillo; D A Spain; F B Miller; M A Wilson; H C Polk; L M Flint
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 12.969

6.  Updating the management of salvageable splenic injury.

Authors:  C L Witte; M J Esser; W D Rappaport
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1992-03       Impact factor: 12.969

7.  The atriocaval shunt. Facts and fiction.

Authors:  J M Burch; D V Feliciano; K L Mattox
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1988-05       Impact factor: 12.969

Review 8.  Management of liver trauma.

Authors:  S A Badger; R Barclay; P Campbell; D J Mole; T Diamond
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 3.352

Review 9.  Blunt trauma to the liver. Analysis of management and mortality in 323 consecutive patients.

Authors:  E F Cox; L Flancbaum; A H Dauterive; R L Paulson
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1988-02       Impact factor: 12.969

10.  Arrest of liver haemorrhage secondary to percutaneous liver biopsy of a haemangioma with fibrin glue.

Authors:  Elijah Dixon; Janice L Pasieka
Journal:  HPB (Oxford)       Date:  2002       Impact factor: 3.647

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