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Living-donor liver transplantation: Right versus left

Shintaro Yagi, Ashish Singhal, Dong‐Hwan Jung, Koji Hashimoto

2020International Journal of Surgery23 citationsDOI

Abstract

A dilemma of graft selection between right or left livers occurs during the planning of living-donor liver transplantation (LDLT) as well as splitting a whole liver graft into full right/full left grafts in deceased-donor liver transplantation. The right liver's relation to the whole liver could be considered as the trunk of a tree; it has a larger volume, the main axis of bile ducts, and the inferior vena cava mainly belongs to the right liver. Therefore, it was considered as the standard graft in LDLTs. Whether to procure the middle hepatic vein (MHV) with a right liver graft or to leave it attached to the left-liver remnant largely depends on the transplant institute. Recently, most transplant institutes tend to leave the MHV with the left liver for the sake of donor safety. Unlike hepatectomy for liver tumors, it is vital to preserve inflow and outflow for both the resected as well as the remaining livers. While procuring any graft type, the most important is to procure a liver graft with reconstructable portal veins, hepatic arteries, hepatic veins, and bile ducts, which should be well preoperatively planned using 3D-computed tomography with considerations given to graft volume and potential congestion areas.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHepatectomyLiving donor liver transplantationLiver transplantationInferior vena cavaSurgeryTransplantationResectionOrgan Transplantation Techniques and OutcomesLiver Disease and TransplantationTransplantation: Methods and Outcomes
Living-donor liver transplantation: Right versus left | Litcius