ABSTRACT
The liver depends on a dual blood supply from the hepatic artery and the portal vein.
The normal liver receives 70% portal flow and 30% hepatic arterial flow, with most
arterial blood feeding the biliary tree. As cirrhosis robs the liver of its regenerative
capacity, the portal flow decreases and intrahepatic portosystemic shunting increases
with a variable increase in arterial flow across arterioportal shunts. This compensation
mechanism attempts to reperfuse remaining sinusoids. Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic
shunts (TIPS) or surgical portosystemic shunts may acutely diminish portal perfusion
further, leading to hepatic failure. Small-diameter TIPS or surgical shunts reduce
the incidence of complications by preserving nutritive portal flow. Although the inverse
relationship of arterial and portal flow is physiologically valid, there is individual
variation in the ability to substitute one blood supply for another. This variability
may result from anatomic or functional factors influencing the flow across arterioportal
shunts. Hepatic perfusion curves derived from enhanced imaging studies can subtype
cirrhotic patients into favorable versus unfavorable perfusion patterns. Patients
with high arterial flow to the liver or patients with retained portal-type flow curves
have better survival and morbidity compared with those patients with unfavorable flow
manifest by diminished arterial-type curves on hepatic perfusion analysis.
KEYWORDS
Portal vein flow dynamics - liver blood supply - liver cirrhosis - portosystemic shunts
- portal hypertension
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Eric M WalserM.D.
Department of Radiology, Davis Building 2N, Mayo Clinic
4500 San Pablo Road, Jacksonville, FL 32224