4.2 Article

Canine intrahepatic portosystemic shunts: Interlobar and intralobar classifications

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VETERINARY RADIOLOGY & ULTRASOUND
卷 64, 期 4, 页码 646-660

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/vru.13252

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circulatory system; developmental anomaly; fissure for round ligament; paraumbilical veins; umbilical vein

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This study design categorized a canine congenital intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (IPSS) into interlobar or intralobar based on its location within a liver fissure or lobe. An anatomic study provided a CT angiography (CTA) appearance of normal canine ductus venosus (DV) and confirmed its location between the papillary process and left-lateral liver lobe. A retrospective multi-institutional case series documented the frequency of IPSS in 56 dogs and classified them into interlobar and intralobar types. Documenting the location of an IPSS during canine portal CTA can enhance the consistency and validity of IPSS description.
This two-part study design showed that a canine congenital intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (IPSS) may be classified by its location within a liver fissure (interlobar) or lobe (intralobar). A prospective anatomic study reviewed normal canine liver morphology and showed the CT angiography (CTA) appearance of the normal canine ductus venosus (DV), which was confirmed via dissection and literature review to be between the papillary process and left-lateral liver lobe (in the fissure for ligamentum venosum). A retrospective multi-institutional case series documented the frequency of imaging findings in 56 dogs with a single IPSS that underwent portal CTA at Cornell University or the Schwarzman Animal Medical Center between June 2008 and August 2022. An interlobar IPSS was seen in 24 of 56 (43%) dogs, all arose from the left portal branch except one. These shunts were typically near the median plane, remained interlobar throughout the course, and were nearly always (96%) craniodorsal to the porta hepatis. Four types were distinguished: patent DV (11 dogs), left interlobar (11 dogs), right interlobar (1 dog), and ventral interlobar (1 dog). Only about half (46%) were in the fissure for ligamentum venosum and therefore classified as a patent DV. An intralobar IPSS was seen in 32 of 56 (57%) dogs, most (88%) originated from the right portal branch and were in the right-lateral liver lobe (21 dogs) or caudate process (7 dogs). During canine portal CTA, documenting the interlobar or intralobar location of an IPSS might increase the consistency and validity of IPSS description.

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