Medical Hypotheses
Volume 73, Issue 5 , Pages 640-650, November 2009

Percutaneously adjustable portal vein banding device could prevent post-operative liver failure – Artificial control of portal venous flow is the key to a new therapeutic world

Division of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery and Transplantation, Department of Surgery, Kyoto University, 54 Shogoin, Kawaracho, Sakyoku, Kyoto 606-8507, Japan

Received 4 August 2009; accepted 9 August 2009. published online 07 September 2009.

Summary 

The risk of post-operative liver failure is the central problem in the field of liver resection and transplantation. This is principally due to the “small-for-size syndrome”, an excessive and destructive portal flow through a remnant liver that is too small, which becomes functionally insufficient. Indeed, there is no efficient and safe method that can be used to manage a greatly reduced remnant liver size.

We postulated that adjustable portal vein banding, to control the portal venous flow and act as a progressively opening “dam”, in proportion to the initial remnant liver weight and its natural growth, could avoid post-operative liver failure of an extremely small remnant liver, by preventing small-for-size syndrome and stimulating liver regeneration, thus, revolutionizing the “liver world”.

It may become possible to totally overcome the dramatic worldwide shortage in liver grafts, by transplanting several adult patients from each multiple spliced cadaveric liver, or by ethically acceptable living donation of an extremely small graft. Furthermore, it could make resectable and maybe cure thousands of patients suffering of liver metastases actually defined “un-resectable”, through the safe use of extreme hepatectomy.

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PII: S0306-9877(09)00560-X

doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2009.08.018

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 73, Issue 5 , Pages 640-650, November 2009