{Reference Type}: Case Reports {Title}: Precision Onion Skinning Technique for Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt Revision. {Author}: Matteo J;Caci D;Soule E;Cunningham J;Hood P; {Journal}: Cureus {Volume}: 10 {Issue}: 8 {Year}: Aug 2018 22 暂无{DOI}: 10.7759/cureus.3180 {Abstract}: A transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt is the standard of care for complications of portal hypertension, such as variceal bleeding, refractory ascites, and hepatic hydrothorax. Hepatic encephalopathy, hepatic insufficiency, and right heart failure are the major complications after shunt creation. If medical management is unsuccessful, the interventionalist is consulted to close/revise the shunt. Closure of the shunt results in a dangerously abrupt increase in portal pressure, increasing risk for life-threatening variceal bleeding. Methods for revising these shunts are reported, which result in coarse adjustments in shunt diameter, causing rapid changes in portosystemic gradients. Our method for shunt revision utilizes carefully sized covered stents deployed in a controlled "onion skin" fashion to produce a narrowing within the hepatic venous limb of the shunt to precisely calibrate the desired portosystemic gradient.