A critical review of the Couinaud technique of hepatic resection
E. C. Thompson, J. F. Grier, C. F. Gholson and J. C. McDonald
Department of Surgery, Louisiana State University School of Medicine, Shreveport, USA.
The Couinaud technique of left hepatic lobectomy involves the isolation and
division of portal vein, hepatic artery, and biliary tributaries as a unit
within the liver parenchyma. It saves time and minimizes blood loss by
virtue of the common investment of the portal structures in a thick
connective tissue sheath. Right hepatic lobectomy can be performed in a
similar manner based on the same assumption that the biliary and vascular
tributaries maintain a constant anatomic relationship with one another. We
describe a patient who underwent right hepatic lobectomy by the Couinaud
technique who (in retrospect) had congenital absence of a left hepatic
duct. Because small bile ducts from the left lobe drained into the right
hepatic duct deep to the sight of resection, obstructive jaundice resulted
postoperatively, necessitating orthotopic liver transplantation. Presently,
the patient is doing well 1 year after transplantation. When the Couinaud
technique is used in the setting of a biliary anatomic variant, the results
can be disastrous. This case illustrates that the Couinaud technique is
unsafe unless biliary anatomic variants are excluded prior to hepatic
lobectomy.