More than two structures in Calot's triangle. A postmortem study.

Publication/Presentation Date

4-1-2000

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Large laparoscopic cholecystectomy series often fail to report the rate at which a third structure is encountered in Calot's triangle.

METHODS: During a 6-month period, the liver and hepatoduodenal ligament of 90 consecutive human cadavers underwent corrosion casting (n = 50), postmortem arteriography (n = 20), and postmortem cholangiography (n = 20).

RESULTS: Third structures within Calot's triangle were arteries (0.6-5.7 mm diameter) in 36.2% (early division of the right hepatic artery, 8.6%; caterpillar hump right hepatic artery, 12.9%; liver branch of the cystic artery, 10%; double cystic arteries, 5.7%), bile ducts (0.3-1.6 mm diameter) in 5. 7% (small-caliber sectoral ducts, 1.4%; right posterior hepatic ducts, 4.3%), and veins (0.9-1.6 mm diameter) merging with the portal vein in 4% of the specimens.

CONCLUSION: Knowledge of the aforementioned anatomy is critical to surgeons facing more than two structures within Calot's triangle during laparoscopic cholecystectomy.

Volume

14

Issue

4

First Page

354

Last Page

357

ISSN

1432-2218

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

10790554

Department(s)

Department of Surgery

Document Type

Article

Share

COinS