RESUMEN
Cases of adult liver transplant recipients with a postoperative right-side acquired diaphragmatic hernia are extremely rare. In this report, we describe an adult case of right-side acquired diaphragmatic hernia 15 years after living donor liver transplant. A 27-year-old woman was diagnosed with pancreatic insulinoma with multiple metastases in the liver. To treat the liver failure, she underwent left lobe living donor liver transplant and distal pancreatectomy with splenectomy 3 years after the transcatheter arterial chemoembolization. As a result of the liver abscesses that reached the diaphragm, the delicate diaphragm was injured, which required repair during the transplant surgery. At the age of 46 years, she developed a cough and intermittent abdominal pain. One month later, she went to another hospital's emergency room with complaints of epigastric pain. The computed tomography scan revealed colon and small intestine prolapse into the right thoracic cavity. She was referred to our hospital and underwent surgery the next day. Two adjacent right diaphragm defects were successfully sutured with nonabsorbable sutures. The patient was discharged on postoperative day 11.