A routine liver transplantation in a patient with situs inversus: A case report and an overview of the literature

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Abstract

Liver transplantation (LT) in an adult with situs inversus (SI) is extremely rare and requires precise pre-operative management. A 48-yr-old male with SI suffering from alcoholic liver cirrhosis underwent LT at our institution in March 2003. Pre-operatively, liver anatomy was determined by CT scan, three-dimensional liver reconstruction and angiography. LT was performed using the Belghiti technique with side-to-side cavo-caval anastomosis, transplanting a graft from a donor with normal anatomy. Post-operatively, the patient recovered without major complications, except an epileptic event because of a central pontine myelinolysis, and he was discharged on the 25th post-operative day. Three months after surgery, the T-drain placed intra-operatively into the donor bile duct was removed; transplant perfusion and function were stable with an actual follow-up period of 24 months. LT in patients with SI is feasible. Pre-operative imaging with three-dimensional reconstruction is a beneficial tool for operation planning in patients with rare anatomic variations. Copyright © Blackwell Munksgaard 2006.

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Wente, M. N., Thorn, M., Radeleff, B., Dei-Anane, G., Mehrabi, A., Sauer, P., … Schemmer, P. (2006). A routine liver transplantation in a patient with situs inversus: A case report and an overview of the literature. Clinical Transplantation, 20(2), 151–155. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-0012.2005.00456.x

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