Interactive Transcript
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So this is a patient who, uh, I believe came
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from an outside institution, and so we really
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didn't have a lot of history, but you know what
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we had was a patient in his 60s with abdominal pain.
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And here's a CT scan, and we were
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asked to look at it and figure
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out what we thought was going on.
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So, axial images with intravenous contrast.
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Let's focus on the liver to start
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with, and very quickly you see
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there's a large mass in the liver.
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The borders are quite irregular,
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and it's really big.
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It's encompassing large portions of
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both the right and left hepatic lobes.
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It's a fairly solitary mass.
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There's a component here, I think, that's
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just sort of connected to it inferiorly,
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but it's sort of an isolated mass.
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You can see that it's having mass effect
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upon the portal veins over here, which
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look like they're almost draped over it.
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And there's probably some inflammatory
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change with the adjacent liver.
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You can see the liver here a
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little bit more hypodense than the
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adjacent liver parenchyma over here.
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And so irregular borders, large hepatic mass.
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And so what else can we glean from this patient?
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Well, the other thing we notice is that
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the patient is post liver transplant.
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Okay.
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I know that because you can look at the IVC over
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here and notice there's some sutures around it.
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And there's not a whole lot of
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procedures in which you'll start
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to see sutures surrounding the IVC.
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And one of the reasons you see that is
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because almost all these transplants utilize
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something called a piggyback technique for
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IVC anastomosis where the donor IVC is done.
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Attached to the recipient IVC and
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this anastomosis, this bright hyper
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dense stuff here is the anastomosis
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is just where that suture line is.
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And you can see here is the donor
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IVC and here's the recipient IVC.
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So that alone informs me that
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the patient is post-transplant.
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And so if I start to see a large sort of
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cystic mass with irregular borders, certainly
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looks like it, it should be infected and
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certainly could be infected in a patient
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who has a liver transplant, my mind
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immediately goes to could this reflect a
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biloma, could that biloma be infected.
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And that's sort of one of the
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things you have to think about.
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And when you think
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go down that pathway.
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The next thing you have to think
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about is why do patients get bilomas
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in the post-transplant setting?
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Common reason is because the
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hepatic artery is compromised.
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Either it's completely thrombosed
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or it has severe stenosis.
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As a result, you have limited
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arterial supply to the liver.
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That itself is not a huge deal because you have
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the portal vein that supplies most of the liver.
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But it is a big deal to the bile ducts
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because the hepatic artery is the sole
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vascular supply to the biliary tree.
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If that vascular supply is compromised for any
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reason, you're going to get biliary ischemia.
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And as a result, bile leaks with these bilomas
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that form can get infected and have quite
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devastating consequences for the patient.
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So, a large collection in a transplant patient,
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I'm thinking of biloma, so the next thing
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I've got to look at is the hepatic arteries.
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So let's look at the aorta and see if we can
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find the hepatic arteries in this patient.
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This is the celiac artery.
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And really, from the celiac, granted
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this is not a CTA, it's not a study
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that's optimized to look at the arteries.
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But nevertheless, you should be seeing
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something going to the liver, and you really
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don't see anything going rightward toward
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the liver, where you expect to see it.
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In fact, if you look very closely, you
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can see that maybe there's a little
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blip of it wanting to come out here.
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For the most part, it's just soft tissue here.
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There's no hepatic artery that I can see.
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Visualize that even, you
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know, it's going to the liver.
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So now I'm much more concerned about hepatic
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artery thrombosis with bilomas forming.
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And the other interesting thing in this
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patient, and we don't have a lot of
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history, but there's in fact, this graft
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that's coming from the aorta, right?
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Look at it over here.
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It's coming all the way upwards, all
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the way upwards, all the way upwards.
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And then in fact, that's going to the liver.
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So in some liver transplant patients, you
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know, they create these hepatic arterial
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grafts, which is what this is in this patient.
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In order to supply the liver.
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But if you look at the graft itself,
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it's completely thrombosed as well.
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There's no contrast going through it.
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So these overall findings are very
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concerning for hepatic artery thrombosis
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in a post-liver transplant patient,
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resulting in biliary ischemia
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and biliary leaks with a large biloma.
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Forming in the liver.
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And in fact, this is what
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happened in this patient.
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And this requires a lot of treatment in
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terms of not only draining the biloma,
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but trying to open up that hepatic
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artery in order to provide flow to the
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hepatic parenchyma and the biliary tree.
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And so here we have images from an IR
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study where they've tried to treat
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this biloma with a drainage catheter.
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They've attempted to sort of
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open up the hepatic artery.
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But the reason I wanted to show this is you
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know, they're injecting the biliary
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tree over here, and what you can see
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nicely, um, is that there are bile leaks.
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You see how when they inject the bile ducts
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over here, some of the bile ducts are leaking,
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and that's as a result of that biliary
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ischemia due to that hepatic artery thrombosis.
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And some of those bile leaks over here
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over time will organize in the liver and
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form that large biloma that we can see
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on our images, and that's being drained
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by this drainage catheter over here.
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