Abstract

To investigate if a targeted subphrenic peritoneal infusion of normal saline to separate liver from diaphragm before radio-frequency (RF) ablation could minimize or eliminate diaphragmatic injury. With a 2-cm-diameter, eight-prong RF needle electrode, 37 hepatic dome RF lesions were created in 10 pigs. Seventeen lesions were created before (non-saline group) and 20 lesions after (post-saline group) intraperitoneal infusion of approximately 500 mL of normal saline. Ten non-saline lesions were created deep (centered 1-2 cm from the liver surface) and seven superficially (centered within 1 cm of the capsule). All 20 post-saline lesions were created superficially. Helical enhanced computed tomography was performed 24-48 hours after ablation. The pigs were killed immediately, and the diaphragm was visually inspected and sectioned. Diaphragmatic injury was graded as 0, no injury; 1, injury up to one-third thickness; 2, injury to two-thirds thickness; 3, full-thickness injury. Representative grade 3 injuries and all partial injuries underwent gross and histologic analysis. All 10 deep non-saline RF lesions caused grade 0 injury. All seven superficial non-saline lesions caused grade 3 injury. Of the 20 superficial post-saline lesions, 13 (65%) caused grade 0 injury; four (20%), grade 1; and three (15%), grade 3. The post-saline group caused significantly less diaphragmatic injury (P <.05). Intraperitoneal saline infusion may reduce the frequency and severity of diaphragmatic injury when adjacent liver is treated with RF ablation.

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