BMC Surgery (May 2017)

Preoperative evaluation of accessory hepatic ducts by drip infusion cholangiography with CT

  • Hiromichi Ishii,
  • Akinori Noguchi,
  • Tomoyuki Fukami,
  • Riho Sugimoto,
  • Hiroyuki Tada,
  • Hiroki Takeshita,
  • Seiji Umehara,
  • Hiroyuki Izumi,
  • Naoki Tani,
  • Masahide Yamaguchi,
  • Tetsuro Yamane

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12893-017-0251-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Background This retrospective study aimed to investigate the incidence of each type of accessory hepatic duct by drip infusion cholangiography with CT (DIC-CT). Methods Five hundred sixty nine patients who underwent preoperative DIC-CT and laparoscopic cholecystectomy were reviewed. Accessory hepatic ducts were classified as follows: type I (accessory hepatic ducts that merged with the common hepatic duct between the confluence of the right and left hepatic ducts and the cystic duct confluence), type II (those that merged with the common hepatic duct at the same site as the cystic duct), type III (those that merged with the common bile duct distal to the cystic duct confluence), type IV (the cystic duct merged with the accessory hepatic duct), and type V (accessory hepatic ducts that merged with the common hepatic or bile duct on the left side). Results Accessory hepatic ducts were observed in 50 patients. Type I, II, III, IV, and V accessory hepatic ducts were detected in 32, 3, 1, 11, and 3 patients, respectively. Based on their drainage areas, the accessory hepatic ducts were also classified as follows: a posterior branch in 22 patients, an anterior branch in 9 patients, a combination of posterior and anterior branches in 16 patients, a left-sided branch in 2 patients, and a caudate branch in 1 patient. None of the patients with accessory hepatic ducts suffered bile duct injuries. Conclusion There are a number of variants of the accessory hepatic duct. DIC-CT is useful to detect the accessory hepatic duct.

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