MEDICAL JOURNAL University of Western Ontario Vol. 19
November, 1949
No.4
PUNCTURE BIOPSY OF THE LIVER SHEILA SHERLOCK,
M.D. (Edin.), M.R.C.P.
Department of Medicine, PoJtgraduate Medical School of London, England
N the study of a patient with liver disease, in spite of careful clinical observation and laboratory investigation, the diagnosis may still remain in doubt. Examination of sections of liver tissue may then prove to be invaluable. A liver biopsy may be obtained by open operation or by a needle-puncture procedure. Although this latter method was apparently performed as long ago as 1883 by no less a person than Paul Ehrlich (von Frerichs, 1884) it has not come into general use until recently. This has been due to the undoubted risks involved. It is only in recent years, with improvements in the care of the patient and in the techn!que, that puncture biopsy of the liver has become widely used. Techniques In all the methods employed a small cylinder of liver is removed by means of a needle, and is then fixed, imbedded in paraffin and sectioned by the usual histological techniques. It must be emphasized that the result is an actual tissue section containing 10-20 hepatic lobules. It is not a smear of liver cells. Site of Puncture. The liver may be approached from above or below the diaphragm. The subcostal technique is confined to cases in which the liver is enlarged to a hand's breadth below the costal margin. The intercostal method has the advantage of providing the whole transverse depth of the right lobe for puncture and of avoiding intraabdominal hollow viscera. It does, however, necessitate penetration of the pleural cavity, but it is the more satisfactory routine procedure and is therefore described in greater detail. The patient li.es supine in bed. The site selected in the line is anaesthetized with 2 per cent procaine solution. The infiltrating needle is carried right down to and through the capsule of the liver. The specially designed cannula is 15 centimetres long and 1.5 millimetres in diameter, and is fitted with a handled trocar. The instrument is passed through the skin and the patient is then instructed to hold his breath in expiration. The trocar and cannula are then passed through the diaphragm and into the liver. The trocar is not withdrawn until the instrument is fully 1.5 centimetres within the liver substance. The cylinder of liver tissue is then punched out by advancing the cannula a further 4-5 centimetres into the liver. A syringe is attached to the cannula, and suction is applied and maintained while the cannula is being withdrawn. The fragm ent of liver
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