Background: Surgical portosystemic shunting has been reported to alleviate successfully portal hypertension in liver transplanted recipients with portal vein thrombosis.
Methods: We report two liver transplanted children with portal vein thrombosis who developed post-shunt acute encephalopathy. In one child, a mesocaval H-type shunt was created surgically because of bleeding related to Roux-en-Y loop varices at 3 months posttransplantation; in the other, a large spontaneous splenorenal shunt was discovered at the time of diagnosis of portal vein thrombosis on day 34 posttransplantation and was preserved.
Results: Post-shunt encephalopathy developed 6 months and 2.7 years after transplantation, causing death in one child.
Conclusions: This report illustrates the risk and the possible dismal outcome of post-shunt encephalopathy in liver transplanted children. Therapeutic procedures other than portosystemic shunting that will restore an hepatopetal portal flow to the liver graft should be considered in liver-transplanted children with portal vein thrombosis.