A surgical experience with a method of rate orthotopic liver retransplantation (OLRT), and a preliminary study of immunological responses after OLRT are reported. OLRT was performed on the same recipient after the fist orthotopic liver transplantation (1st-OLT) according to our original (Kamada's) cuff method. Replacement of the portal vein (PV) and infra-hepatic vena cava (IHVC) cuffs was not technically difficult. However, there were no survivors from the first 6 retransplanted rats, mainly due to complications from defective supra-hepatic vena cava (SHVC) anastomoses. Unlike the human intra-abdominal SHVC, the posterior wall of the intra-abdominal SHVC in rats is too short and fragile to perform an end-to-end anastomosis twice between donor and recipient SHVC. For a second group of seven retransplants, a modification of the SHVC anastomosis was made between donor and recipient SHVC in conjunction with the recipient's cuff diaphragm. This enabled reanastomosis to be secure, resulting in the improved 1-week survival after isogenic OLRT (85.7%). This OLRT model has been applied to the fully allogeneic combination for several immunological studies and led to novel findings. Thus, an experimental model of a rat orthotopic liver retransplant model has the potential to allow more valuable insights into the immunological study of chronic rejection, sensitization and chimerism following liver retransplantation.