## Correct Answer: B. Gastrinoma triangle The gastrinoma triangle is a critical anatomical landmark in gastrointestinal surgery, defined by three boundaries: the junction of the cystic and common bile ducts medially, the junction of the pancreatic body and neck inferiorly, and the junction of the hepatic ducts superiorly. This triangle is clinically significant because **90% of gastrin-secreting neuroendocrine tumours (gastrinomas) in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome are located within this region**, making it the primary search area during surgical exploration. The triangle's relevance extends beyond gastrinomas—it represents a zone of concentrated neuroendocrine tissue in the duodenum and pancreatic head region. In Indian surgical practice, understanding this anatomical boundary is essential for managing ZES, a condition increasingly recognized in our population. The triangle's identification helps surgeons systematically explore the duodenum and pancreatic head during intraoperative ultrasound or manual palpation, reducing operative time and improving tumour localization rates. This anatomical concept is fundamental to modern hepatobiliary and pancreatic surgery training in India. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Doom's triangle** — Doom's triangle is an anatomical landmark in the pelvis (bounded by the gonadal vessels and ureter), not related to gastrinoma localization. This is a distractor that tests whether students confuse different anatomical triangles across body regions. It has no relevance to neuroendocrine tumour surgery. **C. Cholecystohepatic triangle** — The cholecystohepatic triangle (Calot's triangle) is bounded by the cystic artery, common hepatic artery, and common bile duct—a critical landmark in cholecystectomy for identifying the cystic artery. While important in biliary surgery, it is NOT the zone for gastrinoma localization. NBE uses this to trap students who conflate hepatobiliary triangles. **D. Calot's triangle** — Calot's triangle is synonymous with the cholecystohepatic triangle and is used during cholecystectomy to identify vascular anatomy safely. It is unrelated to gastrinoma location. This option exploits students' familiarity with Calot's triangle in biliary surgery, creating confusion with the gastrinoma triangle. ## High-Yield Facts - **Gastrinoma triangle** boundaries: cystic-common bile duct junction (medial), pancreatic body-neck junction (inferior), hepatic duct junction (superior). - **90% of gastrinomas** in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome are located within the gastrinoma triangle, primarily in the duodenum and pancreatic head. - **Calot's triangle** (cholecystohepatic triangle) is bounded by cystic artery, common hepatic artery, and common bile duct—used in cholecystectomy, NOT gastrinoma surgery. - **ZES diagnosis** relies on fasting serum gastrin >1000 pg/mL and gastric pH <2; surgical exploration targets the gastrinoma triangle after imaging fails. - **Intraoperative ultrasound and palpation** of the gastrinoma triangle is the gold standard for gastrinoma localization during surgery in Indian centres. ## Mnemonics **GAS-TRI (Gastrinoma Triangle)** **G**astrin-secreting tumours → **A**natomy **S**earch zone | **T**wo ducts (cystic-CBD) + **R**ight pancreatic junction + **I**nferior hepatic duct = triangle. Use when localizing ZES tumours intraoperatively. **CAL-OT (Calot's Triangle)** **C**ystic artery + **A**rtery (hepatic) + **L**umen (CBD) = **O**peration **T**riangle. Use during cholecystectomy to avoid vascular injury—NOT for gastrinoma. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "triangle" terminology across different surgical regions (pelvis, biliary, pancreatic) to exploit students' pattern-matching errors. The trap conflates Calot's triangle (cholecystectomy landmark) with the gastrinoma triangle (neuroendocrine tumour localization), testing whether students understand that anatomical triangles are region-specific and clinically distinct. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian tertiary centres, gastrinomas are increasingly diagnosed in young patients presenting with refractory peptic ulcer disease or chronic diarrhoea. Intraoperative identification of the gastrinoma triangle via systematic duodenal mobilization (Kocher manoeuvre) and palpation is often the only way to locate small, non-imaging-visible tumours—a skill that separates experienced hepatobiliary surgeons from general surgeons in our setting. _Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Hepatobiliary & Pancreatic chapters); Sabiston Textbook of Surgery (Neuroendocrine Tumours section)_
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