Background and aim: Several reports have described portopulmonary venous anastomosis (PPVA). However, in balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous obliteration (BRTO), attention has not been paid to paradoxical embolism. The objective of this study was to investigate the existence of a right-left shunt due to PPVA when the drainage vein is occluded by a balloon during BRTO.
Methods: The subjects were 19 patients who underwent BRTO. Whether PPVA was present was confirmed on balloon-occluded retrograde transvenous venography (BRTV). After BRTV, a retrograde bolus injection of 20 mL of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) via the balloon catheter was performed under balloon occlusion, and the flow of bubbles into both ventricles was observed with four-chamber view echocardiography. During the same balloon occlusion, bolus injection of CO2 into the inferior vena cava was performed, followed by echocardiography.
Results: PPVA was confirmed on BRTV in four patients (21.1%). On echocardiography with retrograde CO2 injection, bubbles were confirmed in the left ventricle in six patients (31.6%). On echocardiography with CO2 injection into the inferior vena cava, bubbles were not confirmed in the left ventricle in any cases.
Conclusions: When the draining vein was occluded with a balloon and blood flow in a gastrorenal or gastrocaval shunt was stopped during BRTO, PPVA was confirmed in 21.1% of cases on retrograde angiography, and a right-left shunt was confirmed in 31.6% of cases on echocardiography.
Keywords: carbon dioxide; esophageal and gastric varices; hypertension; microbubbles; portal.
© 2014 Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Foundation and Wiley Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.