Abstract

Laparoscopic liver resection (LLR) is safer and more advantageous than open surgery regarding morbidity, blood loss, and length of hospital stay. Several radiological studies and liver surgical strategies confirmed that the anatomy of the liver is more complex than what Couinad described. Intraoperative ultrasound (IOUS) has become an indispensable tool to identify the “real anatomy” and to plan a tailored LLR because of wide sub-segmentary variability and lack of external indicators for small functional liver cores. We schematized our standard ultrasound guidance technique during anatomical and non-anatomical LLR as a four-step method called the Ultrasound Liver Map Technique: (1) Compose the three-dimensional mind map to study the relationships between lesions and surrounding vascular elements; (2) create a sketch on the Glissonian using cautery to help the surgeon recall the mind liver anatomy map; (3) check the section plane while proceeding with the transection; and (4) correct the direction of resection plan to ensure a healthy margin concerning the lesion and to point out the pedicle section correctly and not affected structures. Finally, IOUS-Doppler can be used to study the segmental portal flow to assess venous drainage of the remnant parenchyma, avoiding ischemia and increasing the possibility of performing parenchyma-sparing surgery.

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