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Destruction of a wandering accessory right hepatic artery in a patient with pancreatic body cancer: a case report.

Kenta KikuyaTakahiro EinamaYoichi MiyataToshimitsu IwasakiYoji YamagishiYasuhiro TakihataFumio MorimuraHiromi EdoYasuhiro OtsukaShohei MoriTakazumi TsunenariIbuki FujinumaYuichi HiroseHironori TsujimotoHideki UenoYoji Kishi
Published in: Clinical journal of gastroenterology (2021)
Aberrant right hepatic arteries are sometimes involved in pancreatic head tumors or accidentally damaged during surgical procedures, which could result in postoperative complications. The risk of such injury has been discussed in patients undergoing pancreatoduodenectomy; however, no reports describe the influence of this anomaly in distal pancreatectomy. We report a patient with pancreatic body cancer with an accessory right hepatic artery following a very unique route. A 77-year-old man was referred to our hospital for the treatment of pancreatic cancer. Computed tomography revealed an anomaly in the hepatic artery, with an accessory right hepatic artery encased in the extensive tumor, which also involved the stomach, left gastric artery, and portal vein. Curative resection was achieved by distal pancreatectomy with wedge resection of the stomach and portal vein reconstruction. Both the accessory right hepatic artery and the left gastric artery were sacrificed after confirming intrahepatic arterial flow by intraoperative Doppler ultrasonography. The route of the accessory right hepatic artery in this patient was unique in that it did not run directly into the hepatic hilum but from behind the pancreatic body, where it was incorporated into the tumor. Accurate preoperative assessment and identification of arterial variations is mandatory in any type of pancreatectomy.
Keyphrases
  • patients undergoing
  • computed tomography
  • case report
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • papillary thyroid
  • emergency department
  • magnetic resonance
  • contrast enhanced
  • blood flow
  • squamous cell
  • acute care
  • childhood cancer