Hepatoportoenterostomy

Hepatoportoenterostomy
ICD-9-CM 51.37

A hepatoportoenterostomy or Kasai portoenterostomy is a surgical treatment performed on infants with biliary atresia to allow for bile drainage. In these infants, the bile is not able to drain normally from the small bile ducts within the liver into the larger bile ducts that connect to the gall bladder and small intestine.

The surgery involves exposing the porta hepatis (the area of the liver from which bile should drain) and attaching part of the small intestine to the exposed liver surface. The rationale for this approach is that minute residual bile duct remnants may be present in the fibrous tissue of the porta hepatis and thus provide direct connection with the intrahepatic ductule system to allow bile drainage.[1]

This procedure was developed by the pioneering Japanese biliary and hepatic pediatric surgeon, Morio Kasai (19222008), who devised it in 1951.[2][3][4]

Prognosis

See also

References

  1. Behrman et al. Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Company, 2000.
  2. Ryoji Ohi (2009). "Morio Kasai, MD 1922-2008". Journal of Pediatric Surgery. Elsevier Inc. 44 (3): 481–482. doi:10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2009.01.001.
  3. <http://www.chp.edu › ... › Educational Resources › Liver Transplant Patient Procedures
  4. de:Kasai Morio
  5. Segura-Sampedro JJ; C. Bernal-Bellido; L.M. Marín-Gómez; G. Suárez-Artacho; J. Serrano-Díez-Canedo; J.M. Álamo-Martínez; F.J. Padillo-Ruiz; M.Á. Gómez-Bravo (Nov 2015). "Outcomes of Liver Transplantation During Adulthood After Kasai Portoenterostomy Due to Biliary Atresia". Transplan proc. 47 (9). doi:10.1016/j.transproceed.2015.09.058.


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