BMC Surgery (Nov 2022)

Comprehensive evaluation of three-dimensional anatomy of perigastric vessels using enhanced multidetector-row computed tomography

  • Ichirota Iino,
  • Hirotoshi Kikuchi,
  • Toshiyuki Suzuki,
  • Toshiki Kawabata,
  • Osamu Jindo,
  • Akihiro Uno,
  • Atsuko Fukazawa,
  • Keigo Matsumoto,
  • Hideto Ochiai,
  • Takanori Sakaguchi,
  • Hiroya Takeuchi,
  • Hiroyuki Konno,
  • Shohachi Suzuki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12893-022-01836-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background To perform laparoscopic gastrectomy safely, we aimed to comprehensively re-evaluate perigastric vessel anatomies using a three-dimensional angiography reconstructed from enhanced multidetector-row computed tomography data. Methods Perigastric vessel anatomy was preoperatively analyzed using a multidetector-row computed tomography-based three-dimensional angiography reconstructed in 127 patients undergoing gastric surgery. Results Of the 67 left gastric veins that ran along the dorsal side of the arteries, 59 (88.1%) ran along the dorsal side of the common hepatic artery and flowed into the portal vein. In 18 cases, a common trunk of one to three left gastric arteries and the replaced left hepatic artery was observed. The left inferior phrenic artery ramified from the left gastric artery in 5.5% of the cases. The right gastric artery was classified into distal (73.2%), caudal (18.1%), and proximal (8.7%) types. The infra-pyloric artery was also classified into distal (64.6%), caudal (26.0%), and proximal (9.4%) types. The posterior gastric artery branched as a common trunk with the superior polar artery in the proximal (37.9%) and distal (18.4%) regions of the splenic artery. The left gastroepiploic artery ramified from the splenic (18.1%) and inferior terminal arteries (81.9%). No, one, and two gastric branches of the left gastroepiploic artery, which ramified between the roots of the left gastroepiploic artery and its omental branch, were found in 36.5%, 49.2%, and 14.3% of the cases, respectively. Conclusions Preoperative 3D angiography is useful for the precise evaluation of perigastric vessel anatomies, and may help us to perform laparoscopic gastrectomy and robotic surgery safely.

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