Y. Kojima et al., Portal vein thrombosis caused by microwave coagulation therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma: Report of a case, SURG TODAY, 30(9), 2000, pp. 844-848
Microwave coagulation therapy (MCT) is one of the treatment modalities for
patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). A 67-year-old man with liver
cirrhosis underwent MCT during a laparotomy for a deeply located HCC (2.5 c
m in diameter) at the border of the anterior and posterior segments of the
right hepatic lobe. Two weeks after MCT, he complained of abdominal fullnes
s. Portal vein thrombosis (PVT) was diagnosed because he had massive ascite
s and an echogenic mass in the portal vein on abdominal ultrasonography. PV
T was successfully treated by fibrinolytic therapy with a selective infusio
n of urokinase via the superior mesenteric artery (SMA). There have been fe
w reports on PVT as a complication of MCT. Attention should be paid to the
possible occurrence of PVT as a critical complication after MCT for liver t
umors adjacent to the portal vein. Fibrinolytic therapy via the SMA is thus
considered to be an effective approach for PVT after MCT.