Introduction: Who Should Consider Getting Tested
Porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder is a condition that often hides silently in the body. People who should think about getting tested are those who develop unexpected signs of portal hypertension, which means abnormally high blood pressure in the veins that carry blood from the digestive organs to the liver. This condition can appear without any clear reason, especially when the liver shows no signs of scarring or cirrhosis.[1]
You might need diagnostic evaluation if you suddenly experience vomiting blood, pass black tarry stools, or notice your belly becoming swollen with fluid. These symptoms can happen even if you have never had liver disease before. Young adults and middle-aged people who develop these problems should particularly consider testing, as PSVD tends to affect people at an average age of around 40 years.[2][8]
People with certain underlying conditions should also be more alert. If you have been diagnosed with immune system disorders, chronic infections, blood clotting problems, or have been exposed to certain medications or toxins over long periods, you may be at higher risk. Testing becomes important when routine blood work shows abnormal liver enzyme levels or when imaging done for other reasons reveals an enlarged spleen.[6]
The condition is largely under-recognized because many doctors are not familiar enough with it. This means that if you have unexplained signs of liver problems but normal liver function in many ways, you may need to specifically ask about PSVD or seek evaluation at a specialized liver center.[2]
Classic Diagnostic Methods
Diagnosing porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder requires multiple steps because no single test can confirm the condition on its own. Doctors must carefully rule out other causes of liver problems and portal hypertension before reaching this diagnosis. The process typically starts with blood tests and imaging studies, then moves to more specialized procedures when needed.[1]
Blood Tests and Laboratory Analysis
Blood tests form the foundation of the initial evaluation. Doctors will check your liver enzymes, which can be mildly to moderately elevated in PSVD. However, these enzyme levels are usually not as dramatically high as they would be in severe liver damage or cirrhosis. Alkaline phosphatase, an enzyme that can signal bile duct problems, may show moderate elevation.[6]
Another important finding in blood work is abnormalities in blood cell counts. Many people with PSVD develop low levels of all types of blood cells—a condition called pancytopenia. This happens because the spleen becomes enlarged and starts trapping and destroying blood cells. Red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets can all be affected, though the severity varies from person to person.[3][6]
Testing for specific antibodies helps rule out autoimmune liver diseases. Doctors typically check for antinuclear antibodies (ANA), anti-mitochondrial antibodies (AMA), liver-kidney microsomal antibodies (LKM), and smooth muscle antibodies (SMA). In PSVD, these autoimmune markers usually come back negative. Similarly, tests for hepatitis A, B, and C viruses should be negative, as these viral infections would point to a different cause of liver problems.[6]
Imaging Studies
Imaging plays a crucial role in identifying PSVD and distinguishing it from cirrhosis. An abdominal ultrasound is often the first imaging test performed. In PSVD, the ultrasound typically shows an enlarged spleen, which is one of the key features of the disease. However, unlike in cirrhosis, the liver surface appears smooth rather than bumpy or nodular.[2][4]
The ultrasound examination includes a special technique called Doppler ultrasound, which allows doctors to see how blood flows through the vessels. This can reveal signs of increased pressure in the portal vein system. Sometimes the portal vein itself may contain blood clots, which is a common complication in PSVD.[6]
Another valuable imaging tool is liver stiffness measurement, often done through a procedure called FibroScan or transient elastography. This non-invasive test uses sound waves to measure how stiff or elastic the liver is. In cirrhosis, the liver becomes very stiff due to scarring. In PSVD, the liver stiffness values are typically normal or only mildly elevated, even when signs of portal hypertension are present. This mismatch—high portal pressure but relatively soft liver tissue—is an important clue pointing toward PSVD rather than cirrhosis.[2][4][6]
More advanced imaging with CT scans or MRI may be performed to get a more detailed view of the liver and its blood vessels. These tests can show specific patterns characteristic of PSVD, including enlargement of certain liver segments (particularly segments IV and I) and the absence of the nodular surface typical of cirrhosis. They can also better visualize blood clots in the portal vein and assess the size of the spleen more precisely.[2][4]
Liver Biopsy: The Gold Standard
Despite all the blood tests and imaging, a liver biopsy remains mandatory for confirming the diagnosis of PSVD. This procedure involves removing small samples of liver tissue, which are then examined under a microscope by a specialized doctor called a pathologist. The biopsy is essential because it reveals specific microscopic changes that cannot be seen with any other test.[2][4]
The pathologist looks for three main patterns of injury in the liver tissue. The first is called obliterative portal venopathy, which means the small portal veins inside the liver have become narrowed or completely blocked. These vessels may have thickened walls, abnormal shapes, or lumens that are almost entirely closed off. This blockage is what leads to the increased pressure in the portal vein system.[2][4][6]
The second pattern is nodular regenerative hyperplasia. Under the microscope, the liver tissue appears to have small nodules or clusters of liver cells. However, these nodules are not surrounded by scar tissue like they would be in cirrhosis. Special staining techniques, particularly reticulin staining, help make these nodules more visible. The nodules have thicker liver cell plates in the center and thinner plates around the edges.[2][4][6]
The third pattern is incomplete septal fibrosis, which refers to thin bands of scar tissue that extend partially into the liver but do not connect to form complete bridges between different areas. Importantly, even when some scarring is present, the overall liver architecture is not destroyed in the way it is with cirrhosis. The absence of true cirrhosis, despite signs of portal hypertension, is a defining feature of PSVD.[2][4][6]
During the biopsy examination, the pathologist also looks for other non-specific changes. There might be mild inflammation around the portal areas, abnormal blood vessels near the portal tracts, and a slight irregular distribution of portal areas throughout the liver tissue. The overall liver structure appears somewhat disorganized, with a vague nodular appearance that becomes clearer with special staining methods.[6]
Endoscopic Examination
When patients present with vomiting blood or other signs of bleeding from the digestive tract, doctors perform an endoscopy. This procedure involves inserting a flexible tube with a camera through the mouth and down into the esophagus and stomach. The camera allows the doctor to directly visualize esophageal varices, which are swollen, twisted veins in the esophagus caused by increased portal pressure.[3]
Finding these varices confirms that portal hypertension is present and has reached a level where complications are occurring. The size and appearance of the varices help doctors determine the risk of bleeding and plan appropriate treatment. In the case described in one medical report, a young patient had four cords of esophageal varices discovered during endoscopy, which explained the episodes of vomiting blood.[3]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
Clinical trials are research studies designed to test new treatments or better understand diseases. For patients with PSVD, participating in clinical trials may offer access to experimental therapies, as there are currently no specific treatments proven to stop or reverse the disease itself. However, to enroll in a clinical trial, patients must meet specific diagnostic criteria to ensure the study results are accurate and meaningful.[8]
One important clinical trial currently recruiting patients is studying the use of TIPS (transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt) for complicated portal hypertension related to PSVD. To qualify for this trial, patients must have a confirmed diagnosis of PSVD according to VALDIG criteria, which stands for Vascular Liver Disease Interest Group criteria. These criteria emphasize the presence of characteristic histological features on liver biopsy combined with clinical signs of portal hypertension in the absence of cirrhosis.[11]
For this particular trial, patients must also have specific complications of portal hypertension. Eligible complications include bleeding from the digestive tract due to portal hypertension, ascites that does not respond to standard diuretic treatment (called refractory ascites), or blood clots in the portal vein. These complications indicate that the portal hypertension has become severe enough to warrant more aggressive intervention.[11]
The trial excludes patients with certain other conditions that could confuse the results or put participants at additional risk. People with Budd-Chiari syndrome (blocked veins draining the liver), Rendu-Osler disease, heart failure, Fontan procedure for heart problems, sarcoidosis, schistosomiasis infection, congenital liver fibrosis, Abernethy syndrome, or tumor infiltration from lymphoma cannot participate. These exclusions ensure that the trial studies PSVD specifically, without other diseases that cause similar symptoms.[11]
The trial also compares PSVD patients receiving TIPS with cirrhosis patients receiving the same procedure. The cirrhosis control group must be matched by age, sex, and type of portal hypertension complication. This comparison helps researchers understand whether PSVD responds differently to TIPS than cirrhosis does, which could guide future treatment decisions.[11]
To participate in clinical trials for PSVD, patients typically need complete documentation of their diagnosis. This includes pathology reports from liver biopsy confirming the characteristic microscopic features, imaging studies showing typical findings, blood test results ruling out other liver diseases, and documentation of portal hypertension complications. Some trials may also require assessment of liver function through blood tests and measurement of portal pressure through specialized procedures.[8]
Researchers working on PSVD are also developing new tools to predict patient outcomes and identify therapeutic targets. One major European research project called RiTA (Porto-Sinusoidal Vascular Disease: Risk Stratification and Therapeutic Approaches) aims to investigate how the disease progresses naturally and develop biomarkers that can predict prognosis. This kind of research may eventually lead to clinical trials testing treatments that target the underlying disease mechanisms rather than just managing complications.[8]



