Abstract

The purpose of this study is to define the blood vessels from a surgical perspective and show the frequency of vascular anatomical anomalies as well as the positional relationship with the surrounding organs, including the number of jejunal veins that cross the dissection area in our series. From January 2016 to December 2018, 126 patients who received ileocecal resection or right hemicolectomy for colonic cancer in our institution were retrospectively analyzed by preoperative enhanced computed tomographic colonography images that were obtained using an 80-detector row CT scanner and workstation. The ileocolic artery/vein, right colic artery/vein and middle colic artery/vein were defined as the vessels that flow directly from or into the superior mesenteric artery/vein. All colic veins that flowed into the gastro-colic trunk were defined as accessory right colic veins. The accessory right colonic vein existed more than two in 62.6% of cases. In 11 cases (8.9%), the inflow point of the ileocecal vein was on the ventral side of the pancreas. There was one jejunal vein that straddled the dissection area in 31% and two in 6.3%. This study elucidated the vascular anatomy and positional relationship with surrounding organs that is required in central vascular ligation during complete mesocolic excision for right sided colon cancer.

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