Abstract

Reports of the usefulness of ultrasonography in the diagnosis of hepatic veno-occlusive disease (HVOD) have presented conflicting results. To determine the usefulness of gray-scale or Doppler ultrasonographic measurements in the diagnosis of HVOD in pediatric patients undergoing BMT. We prospectively obtained 202 serial sonograms on 48 patients and examined the association between the clinical diagnosis of HVOD (McDonald criteria) and eight ultrasound parameters, including the hepatic artery resistive index (HARI), direction and velocity of portal venous flow, and thickness of the gall bladder wall. HVOD developed in 29 of the 48 patients. The portal venous velocity increased after BMT in the group without HVOD and decreased in the group with HVOD; this difference was significant (P = 0.01). However, there was a great deal of variability in velocity measurements for individual patients. The mean HARI was 0.64 in the group with HVOD and 0.63 in the group without HVOD, and there was no difference between the two groups in the pattern of change in HARI relative to the day of BMT (P = 0.4). There was also no significant difference in thickness of the gallbladder wall between the two groups (P = 0.6). No ultrasound parameter studied was as useful as the McDonald criteria for diagnosing HVOD.

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