Abstract

The effect on the liver of portal or bile duct branch occlusion was examined in rabbits by measuring hepatic tissue blood flow and cellular kinetics, using the bromodeoxyuridine labeling index. The portal branch bile duct branch, or both, to the main lobe and caudate lobe (80.4% of total liver weight) were ligated or embolized just above the right posterior lobe (19.6%), resulting in compensatory hypertrophy of the right posterior lobe and atrophy of the main and caudate lobes. Twenty-four days after ligation, the degree of compensatory hypertrophy in the different groups was comparable. There were significant differences in the pattern of the development of hypertrophy. Ligation of both a portal branch and the corresponding bile duct resulted in more rapid hypertrophy and atrophy than ligation of a portal branch alone. Ligation of a branch of the bile duct resulted in slow development of hypertrophy and atrophy. In the embolization group, the increase in the right posterior lobe stopped 6 days after the operation, resulting that it was about 40% thereafter. Histological findings showed that the fibrin clot had contracted and was floating in the portal branch to the main lobe. These results suggested that portal blood flow to the main lobe had resumed and was gradually increasing as the clot contracted. Portal branch ligation gave results superior to those with portal branch embolization with regard to application to preoperative procedure in extended hepatobiliary surgery.

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