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1/2. Pneumobilia: benign or life-threatening.

    Pneumobilia, or air within the biliary tree of the liver, suggests an abnormal communication between the biliary tract and the intestines, or infection by gas-forming bacteria. Pneumobilia usually can be distinguished from air in the portal venous system by its appearance on computed tomography (CT) scan. The most common conditions associated with pneumobilia include: 1) a biliary-enteric surgical anastamosis, 2) an incompetent sphincter of oddi, or 3) a spontaneous biliary-enteric fistula. Three cases of pneumobilia associated with its most common causes are presented and further differential diagnostic possibilities as well as the implications of this finding on patient management are discussed.
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2/2. Three-dimensional helical computed tomography with intravenous cholangiography for sclerosing cholangitis manifested as postcholecystectomy symptom.

    A 46-year-old woman who had upper abdominal pain 10 years after cholecystectomy, and who had incidental sclerosing cholangitis (SC), was investigated by three-dimensional helical computed tomographic (3-DHCT) cholangiography with contrast medium, because endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) was unsuccessful and a second ERC was not permitted by the patient. The cholangiogram demonstrated annular strictures of the bilateral hepatic duct at the confluence of the common hepatic duct, and dilatation of the left intrahepatic biliary duct. Although we could not clarify the cause of the biliary tract deformity at the time of the 3-DHCT, the tentative diagnosis of postcholecystectomy deformity of the biliary tree led to successful treatment by right liver lobectomy and hepaticojejunostomy. Histologic findings were compatible with SC. From this experience and the literature, we suggest that 3-DHCT cholangiography with contrast medium can contribute to the preoperative diagnosis of morphological changes in the biliary tree in patients with postcholecystectomy symptoms.
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