Interactive Transcript
0:01
So this patient is a young patient, around 35 years old,
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female, and is being evaluated as a
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liver donor, and so we're being asked to look
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at her anatomy prior to potential surgical
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resection, and this is a little bit of an older
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case, and normally we do CT imaging to look at
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some of the vascular anatomy, and we do the MR
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imaging to look at some of the biliary anatomy.
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And there are different institutions that,
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you know, utilize CT and MR differently.
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However, let's say about a decade ago, we would
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use CT imaging to evaluate everything because
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we had a contrast agent called cholangiogram
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that would be excreted through the bile ducts.
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Um, and would nicely
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delineate the biliary anatomy.
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However, that contrast agent is
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actually no longer on the market.
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So we don't see these types of studies anymore.
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Nevertheless, I thought this was a nice case
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in order to show another anatomic variation
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that we can see in the biliary anatomy.
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So as we scroll down over here, we can see
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that the contrast agent is being excreted in
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the bile ducts; therefore, they look brighter
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than they would normally be expected to look.
1:01
We can see the left hepatic
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duct coming over here.
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We can see the anterior branch of the
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right hepatic duct here, and the posterior
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branch of the right hepatic duct over here.
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I'm going to magnify as we scroll downwards.
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All three of them are coming together,
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coming together, coming together.
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And right around here, you can see that
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the left, the anterior right, and the
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posterior right meet right at the same spot.
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Okay.
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They meet right there and continue
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downwards as the common hepatic duct.
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I'll show it to you on the coronals as well.
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You can see the left hepatic duct coming
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downwards here, the right anterior
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hepatic duct coming over here, and
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the posterior duct coming over here.
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So let's follow this and this.
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They're going to come together.
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And that left hepatic duct also
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comes right at the same spot.
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Okay.
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And we'll make that maybe a little bit
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thicker so that we can, uh, appreciate
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some of this anatomy right around here.
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So this is the left one, this is the
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anterior right, this is the posterior
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right, all coming to a single spot.
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And so this specific variation is known
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as a trifurcation, where all three of them
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come together and meet at the same spot.
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It's also one that is relatively
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common, estimated to occur in
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about 11% of patients.
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It has no real clinical significance
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other than knowledge of this anatomic
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variation is important for surgeons to
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know prior to any surgery that involves,
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you know, resection of the liver or
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resection of some of the biliary tree.
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