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1.
Sudan j. med. sci ; 17(3): 377-386, 2022. tales, figures
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1398225

ABSTRACT

Hepatobiliary surgery through laparoscopic approach is becoming a routine. Knowledge of extrahepatic arterial tree is essential for surgical and imaging procedures. Anatomical complexity is expected since the liver is developed by mergingof lobules with its separate blood supply. This makes a wide range of variations in the pattern of vascular arrangement and so reinforces the need for an accurate understanding of full spectrum of variations. This study aimed to investigate the variations in origin and distribution of extrahepatic arterial supply. Fifty volunteers (32 males and 18 females) aged 20­70 years were randomly recruited from the department of CT scan in Al Amal Hospital, Khartoum North, Sudan. The patients were already candidates for CT angiography with contrast for conditions other than hepatobiliary diseases. The reported data is related to those who accepted to participate in the study. Patients with history of hepatobiliary disease were excluded. 3D views of the scans were treated and the extrahepatic arterial tree was traced in a computer-based software. Key findings suggest that Michel's classification was considered the standard template for description ­ 76% of them showed Michel's type I classification. Types III and V constituted about 2%. About 4% of the cases were represented by types VI and IX. Other types of variations constituted about 12%. To conclude, although type I classification which describes the textbook pattern of hepatic artery distribution was significantly detected among the Sudanese population, other variants were to be considered since they are related to major arteries like aorta and superior mesenteric.


Subject(s)
Humans , Adult , Hepatic Artery , Liver Diseases , Periodicity , Digestive System Diseases , Computed Tomography Angiography
2.
Sudan Medical Monitor. 2014; 9 (3): 127-131
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-165845

ABSTRACT

Medico legally this study identify certain Sudanese infants ages [at birth, day 4, and 8 weeks] through description of ossification pattern in the anterior skull base using computed tomography [CT] scan. Also, it is describing the normal anatomical pattern of ossification. So this study will explain and reveals the Sudanese own skull base bony print. Total number of selected cases for study are 12 died children admitted to Mortuary of Khartoum between July/2011 and November/2011, and all cases of known age, sex and nationality [Sudanese] according to police records, confirmed medico legally by evaluation of external signs of live. All cases were examined in Khartoum teaching hospital at January/2012 that explained the skull base development and ossification by direct coronal CT scans, 1 mm and wide window [bone] settings of Para Nasal Sinuses [PNS] protocol. The used CT scan machine is TOSHIBA-Asteion. The observations of day 1,4 and 8 weeks explained that each determined age has its own skull base bony pattern. Also observations of those ages revealed that the development of the forming parts of skull base which include orbital plates and its extension over lateral ethmoidal air cells, roof of ethmoid complex, cribriform plate, perpendicular plate of ethmoid and ethmoidal air cells was progressively increasing with age except; the perpendicular plate of ethmoid bone which doesn't meet the vomer in the posterior septum at any of these certain ages although vomer was ossified at those varied ages. And the Crista galli neither ossified nor fused with ethmoidal labyrinths at all. Also, the Ethmoidal air cells have never been extended above the plane of the cribriform plate. Observed ages and patterns of ossification was different somewhat from that reported in prior radiologic and anatomic studies in the ethmoidal complex and its extension over the cribriform plate of ethmoid bone also in the crista, galli which was seen ossified as early as 2 months of age in previous study

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