Since Kamada introduced the cuff method for OLT, it has greatly benefited OLT in basic and clinical medicine1,2,6. AHT as a surgical skill has been prioritized to minimize as soon as possibly by clinicians and microsurgeons who perform liver transplantation. Clinically it ranged from 37 to 321 minutes, it was reported that over 100-minute AHT was associated with a higher incidence of graft dysfunction [6,8]. Experimentally, the AHT ceiling of rat OLT is 26 minutes in the literature [1,6]. For our report, it is safely prolonged to 30 minutes, or even 35 minutes whereas survival rates were not significantly different, in the time-efficient manner, the different anhepatic time has little impact on recipients and survival.
Continuous suture and cuff method comprise the reconnection of SHVC [1.2.9–14], suturing should be completed rapidly while SHVC is blocked and it necessitates clamping the diaphragmatic ring a little more without ventilator assisting. The diaphragm is to maintain respiratory movement, once clamped, that dramatically affects respiratory and causes rats to move due to compromised respiration (supplemental video 1), some surgeons might add anesthesia, consequently the rats will die, especially under plain and simple mask anesthesia inhalation (ether etc), this is the reason that cardiac arrest occurred and higher mortality came forth during AHT [7]. Cuff method efficiently shortens SHVC anastomosis, but it is not universally applicable due to short SHVC in length. Magnetic ring is a cuff method in nature and precludes future MRI examination [13,14].
Pharmaceutics extension AHT came forth in some centers, prostaglandin and its analogue were used to extend AHT and improve survival [15,16]. Liu et al reported that clamping the supra-celiac aorta one minute can effectively improve rat OLT by increasing the tolerable time of AHT [6], this maneuver does not surpass the AHT ceiling. Our maneuver is surgically easy and effectively extends AHT to 30 minutes. A few references were reviewed to reveal that the diaphragm was clamped much more [17,18], we followed that procedure which led to irregular breathing (supplemental video 1). In the literature almost no attention has been paid to how to clamp SHVC or the diaphragm on the reconnection of SHVC, our report is the first description of clamping the diaphragm. As to tolerance induction in our report, it is ongoing research of our project and beyond the scope here.
In summary, OLT can be safely performed with 30 minute AHT extended through the change of clamping the diaphragm; this procedure facilitates its application in the research.