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Anatomical Variant: Right Arising from Left

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This case is a young lady in her 20s

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who is being evaluated as a liver donor,

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so we are being asked to look at her MR imaging.

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She's also getting CT imaging, which I will not

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show you, but we're looking at her MR imaging

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to evaluate some of her biliary anatomy prior

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to her potential consideration as a liver donor.

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So we'll start off with the T2-weighted

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sequences, even though in this instance,

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I don't think it's as useful, but I

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just want to show you how we sort

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of use it, if at all, or what the utility

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could be to evaluate the biliary anatomy.

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So T2-weighted sequences,

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everything looks pretty good.

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This is a healthy patient.

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You know, we're asked to look at the

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bile ducts, and it's very challenging

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to look at the biliary tree.

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We see no dilatation of the biliary tree.

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This looks, this is the extrahepatic

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biliary tree; the common

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bile duct looks in normal caliber.

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The intrahepatic bile ducts are very,

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very small, which is a good thing.

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It means that they're normal, but it doesn't

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quite give us the anatomy that we need to see

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in order to tell the surgeons what's going on.

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We often do MRCP sequences as well to

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try to evaluate the biliary tree.

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In my own experience, sometimes

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they come out great.

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A lot of times, again,

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they're quite limited.

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And this one is an MRCP sequence

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in a coronal plane.

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We can see that there's high T2

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hyperintense fluid in the CSF,

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something in the stomach as well.

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But again, the bile ducts are

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very, very tough to see over here.

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So if we were to just use our T2-weighted

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sequences and MRCP sequence, I think

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we'd be in trouble here and we would have a

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tough time telling the surgeons what they needed

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to know in terms of the discrete anatomy.

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So we use intravenous contrast

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with an agent with partial

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hepatobiliary excretion called Eovist.

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And we wait at different time

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points: 10 minutes, 15 minutes,

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20 minutes, 30 minutes as well.

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At some of the later time points,

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you're going to start to see contrast

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that's excreted through the bile ducts.

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on your post-contrast sequences.

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And it's going to be those sequences

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that we use in order to identify

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its discrete biliary anatomy.

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So this is a post-contrast sequence after

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giving Eovist, and I'm just going to zoom up

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a little bit over here, magnify, just so you

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can kind of see what we're talking about.

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And as I scroll through these

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images, just want you to get a

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sense of what you think is going on.

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And there's a very, very

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subtle anatomic variation here.

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And so, as mentioned in the normal

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anatomy case, the right hepatic duct

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is composed of an anterior

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branch and the posterior branch.

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Over here is the anterior branch and

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over here is the posterior branch.

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Here is the left hepatic duct.

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What we notice is that the posterior

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right hepatic duct is actually draining

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directly into the left hepatic duct.

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The anterior branch still hasn't drained

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in, but it's coming downwards now.

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The posterior is still draining into the left.

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The anterior branch hasn't come in yet.

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And right there is when the

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anterior branch comes in.

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Let's view this in the coronal plane.

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Again, I'm going to magnify

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here is the left hepatic duct.

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This is the anterior branch

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of the right hepatic duct.

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And right over here is another bile duct.

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And that's actually going to be

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the posterior right hepatic duct.

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You see how it's going posteriorly

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into the right hepatic lobe.

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It's draining from this, coming upwards,

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coming upwards and draining right into

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that left hepatic duct before then meeting

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the anterior hepatic duct and forming

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the common hepatic duct over here.

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And so I wanted to show this because

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we will often see anatomic variations.

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And when you do see anatomic variations, this

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one is relatively common, by some

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estimates seen in about 15 percent of cases.

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And so when I look at patients and

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they're asking me to look at biliary

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variations, this is the first one that I

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look for because it's relatively common.

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And so specifically, it's when the right

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posterior duct drains to the left duct,

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rather than joining the anterior hepatic

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duct and forming the right hepatic duct.

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And so this is a common anatomic

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variation seen in our patients.

Report

Faculty

Mahan Mathur, MD

Associate Professor, Division of Body Imaging; Vice Chair of Education, Dept of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging

Yale School of Medicine

Tags

Other Biliary

MRI

Liver

Idiopathic

Gastrointestinal (GI)

Congenital

Body

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