Cases reported "Gallstones"

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1/56. Laparoscopic choledochoduodenostomy.

    Laparoscopic cholecystectomy has become the gold standard for treatment of patients with symptomatic cholelithiasis. Management of common bile duct stones in the era of laparoscopy is an area of controversy. Although perioperative endoscopic retrograde cholangiography remains as a widely used procedure, experience is accumulating on the exploration of the common bile duct with the laparoscope. A biliary drainage procedure is indicated in selected patients with choledocholithiasis. Initially described by Reidel in 1892, side-to-side choledochoduodenostomy has become a popular biliary-enteric anastomosis technique in the last century. We describe two patients with recurrent choledocholithiasis and biliary obstruction due to benign biliary strictures. Both patients underwent laparoscopic common bile duct exploration and stone extraction. A side-to-side choledochoduodenostomy is then performed laparoscopically as a drainage procedure. Laparoscopic choledochoduodenostomy resulted in resolution of jaundice and relief of biliary obstruction. Laparoscopic choledochoduodenostomy can be an acceptable alternative to the open choledochoduodenostomy. In addition to a tension-free anastomosis and an adequate-sized stoma, intracorporeal suturing and knot-tying skills are also essential to the success of this procedure.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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2/56. Laparoscopic treatment for biliary ascariasis.

    Biliary ascariasis is one of the most common types of ascaris infections. The current treatments are helminthic drug therapy, endoscopic extraction, and surgical extraction. A case of biliary ascariasis and cholecystocholedocholithiasis was successfully treated by laparoscopic extraction of the living worm and biliary stones. This procedure was found to be very effective for biliary ascariasis with biliary stones, and it holds promise for similar cases in the future.
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ranking = 3
keywords = extraction
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3/56. Temporary use of an accuflex stent for unextractable common bile duct stones.

    Endoscopic management has become the main therapeutic approach for the extraction of common bile duct (CBD) stones, and successful removal can be achieved in 80-90% patients using conventional balloon and basket techniques. However, if it is difficult to completely fragment a stone, or to clear the CBD, which may occur for a variety of reasons, the therapeutic problem will remain. When bile duct stones can not be removed, a viable management option is to place a biliary stent to ensure drainage. However, recent studies of long-term biliary stenting, with a plastic stent, showed a relatively high rate of morbidity and mortality. We report an alternative, unique treatment for unextractable common bile duct stones, using the temporal placement of an expandable metallic stent (EMS) to facilitate passage of fragments through the papilla.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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4/56. Management of choledocholithiasis during pregnancy by magnetic resonance cholangiography and laparoscopic common bile duct stone extraction.

    Management of common bile duct (CBD) stones during pregnancy is a difficult problem. The authors reported the case of a patient who was 22 weeks' pregnant who had a symptomatic CBD stone successfully treated by the association of magnetic resonance cholangiography and laparoscopic CBD stone removal. The patient delivered a healthy baby boy at 39 weeks. Magnetic resonance cholangiography and laparoscopic CBD exploration is a viable option in the management of CBD stones in pregnant patients that carries a low risk for the fetus while preserving the advantages of minimally invasive surgery for the mother.
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ranking = 4
keywords = extraction
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5/56. Surgical clips as a nidus for stone formation in the common bile duct.

    We report the case of a 40-year-old woman who presented with symptomatic gallbladder stones. A laparoscopic cholecystectomy was performed using metallic clips. Three years later, she underwent a endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) for interscapular and right upper quadrant pain, jaundice, and fever. This examination revealed a stone and clips in the common bile duct (CBD). A sphinteroctomy was undertaken, but the stone could not be extracted despite multiple attempts. Ultimately, a Kocher incision was required to achieve choledocotomy and extraction of the stone and the clips.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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6/56. Treatment of choledocholithiasis in pregnancy: a case report.

    Some difficulties have been encountered in treating pregnant patients with choledocholithiasis because of the probable harmful effect of scopic irradiation on fetus when endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is necessary. In this paper, we present such a patient, in whom endoscopic stone extraction without scopic examination was successfully carried out in the guidance of magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) before the ERCP procedure.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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7/56. Laparoscopic common bile duct exploration.

    Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is now the standard approach to gallbladder disease. While laparoscopic cholecystectomy offers many advantages over the conventional laparotomy procedure one of its drawbacks is that a synchronous common bile duct exploration, for so long a cornerstone of management of choledocholithiasis, is not yet widely practised laparoscopically. Endoscopic sphincterotomy or open surgery, with their attendant hazards and morbidity, remain the most common approaches. A flexible choledochoscope with an operating channel may in future facilitate laparoscopic management of choledocholithiasis but as yet this is not widely available. We report the removal of a common duct stone by dormia basket extraction through the cystic duct at laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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8/56. Combination therapy of laparoscopic cholecystectomy and endoscopic transpapillary lithotripsy for both cholecystolithiasis and choledocholithiasis.

    This report describes five patients with cholecystolithiasis and choledocholithiasis who were treated by combination endoscopic extraction of common bile-duct stones with sphincterotomy (EST) and laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC). Following this combination procedure the patients were relieved completely of obstructive jaundice and right upper quadrant pain, leaving only small trocar insertion scars made during the short course of hospitalization. The combination therapy of EST and LC will be recommended for this kind of patient as a minimally invasive procedure.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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9/56. Bouveret's syndrome complicated by a distal gallstone ileus.

    AIM: gastric outlet obstruction caused by duodenal impaction of a large gallstone migrated through a cholecystoduodenal fistula has been referred as Bouveret's syndrome. Endoscopic lithotomy is the first-step treatment, however, surgery is indicated in case of failure or complication during this procedure. methods: We report herein an 84-year-old woman presenting with features of gastric outlet obstruction due to impacted gallstone. She underwent an endoscopic retrieval which was unsuccessful and was further complicated by distal gallstone ileus. physical examination was irrelevant. RESULTS: endoscopy revealed multiple erosions around the cardia, a large stone in the second part of the duodenum causing complete obstruction, and wide ulceration in the duodenal wall where the stone was impacted. Several attempts of endoscopic extraction by using foreign body forceps failed and surgical intervention was mandatory. Preoperative ultrasound evidenced pneumobilia whilst computerized tomography showed a large stone, 5 cm x 4 cm x 3 cm, logging at the proximal jejunum and another one, 2.5 cm x 2 cm x 2 cm, in the duodenal bulb causing a closed-loop syndrome. She underwent laparotomy and the jejunal stone was removed by enterotomy. Another stone reported as located in the duodenum preoperatively was found to be present in the gallbladder by intraoperative ultrasound. Therefore, cholecystoduodenal fistula was broken down, the stone was retrieved and cholecystectomy with duodenal repair was carried out. She was discharged after an uneventful postoperative course. CONCLUSION: As the simplest and the least morbid procedure, endoscopic stone retrieval should be attempted in the treatment of patients with Bouveret's syndrome. When it fails, surgical lithotomy consisting of simple enterotomy may solve the problem. Although cholecystectomy and cholecystoduodenal fistula breakdown is unnecessary in every case, conditions may urge the surgeon to perform such operations even though they carry high morbidity and mortality.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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10/56. Gallstone ileus and bowel perforation after endoscopic sphincterotomy.

    Gallstone ileus as a complication of endoscopic sphincterotomy (ES) is exceptional, and this is only the second reported case. The present case is unique in that there was no previous instrumentation to the papilla, the bowel was obstructed and perforated, and the patient survived. This case again points out the danger of performing ES for large common bile duct stones. When a large stone is not extracted after ES, close monitoring is mandatory until unequivocal stone passage through the intestine is proven. In both cases reported so far, the lack of adequate monitoring after failure of stone extraction by ES was critical to the severity of gallstone ileus.
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ranking = 1
keywords = extraction
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