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- IRMS - Nicolae Testemitanu SUMPh
- 1. COLECȚIA INSTITUȚIONALĂ
- MedEspera: International Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors
- MedEspera 2014
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12710/18032
Title: | Benign jaundice choledocholitiasis - surgical emergency |
Authors: | Pascal, Rodica |
Keywords: | choledocholithiasis;pre-/intraoperator diagnosis;contemporary surgery |
Issue Date: | 2014 |
Publisher: | Ministry of Health of the Republic of Moldova, State Medical and Pharmaceutical University Nicolae Testemitanu, Medical Students and Residents Association |
Citation: | PASCAL, Rodica. Benign jaundice choledocholitiasis - surgical emergency. In: MedEspera: the 5th Internat. Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors: abstract book. Chișinău: S. n., 2014, p. 169. |
Abstract: | Introduction: Jaundice is due to failure of route intrahepatic bile- biliary duct -digestive tract,
incriminated mostly of choledocholithiasis. Often the icteric manifestation of choledocholithiasis is
established with a delay, which can reach a few months, which significantly increases the operative
risk due to development of hepato -renal failure and to the installation of the suppurative
angiocolitis, with high rate of postoperative mortality . In the last decades technological progress
has led to the creation of a successive generations of improved equipment, which enables efficient
exploration of the entire biliary system. So surgical act could become more complex, being made
safe interventions previously considered impossible. Surgical operations wich are performed to
emergency patients are accompanied by complications and lethality reaches 15-30%, 3 times more
than mechanical jaundice approached as if the emergency postponed.
Purpose and objectives: Highlighting the informational value of the contemporary diagnostic methods pre- and intraoperative in the benign mechanical jaundice made by choledocholithiasis and effectiveness of surgical treatment depending on clinical and anatomical form and the moment of its establishment.
Materials and methods: The study is based on retrospective analysis of 83 clinical observation
sheets of patients with final diagnosis of choledocholithiasis, recorded the clinical and laboratory
manifestations, under which were later established indications for surgery and operative time.
Results: Patients with benign jaundice refer to a subset of surgical pathology addressed as a
delayed emergency, within 3-5 days, even when their etiology is not understood, if not progressing
diagnostic approach. Indications for surgical treatment are choledocholithiasis diagnosed preoperatively, where the condition itself is an indication of surgical, and the suspected choledocholithiasis
with subsequent intraoperative diagnosis, where the main indication for surgery is mechanical
jaundice syndrome. Surgery was undertaken in all cases , in the vast majority, the nature of
interventions aimed at solving both jaundice by choledocholithotomy, endoscopic papillosphincterotomy and drainage, as well as the progressive diseases associated, by cholecystectomy
and endoscopic papillo-sphincterotomy (in the cases of dysfunction of the Oddi sphincter).
Drainage method was determined by CBP diameter , so the diameter < 1.5 cm was chosen to install
an external drain type (Kehr), for a diameter> 1.5 cm to perform latero-lateral choledochoduodenostomy. Postoperatively, incorporating all the data, we obtained the diagnosis of choledocholithiasis
associated with comorbidities in 59 % of other adjacent structures: chronic calculous cholecystitis,
stenosis of Oddi sphincter, choiecysto-choledocho-duodenal fistulas. Postoperative complications
were recorded mostly at decompensated patients. Postoperative mortality was 8.4 % .
Conclusion: jaundice presents indications for emergency surgical treatment delayed if
diagnostic approach is not progressing (3-5 days), especially when the adjacent structures
overlapping with pathological disorders. |
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: | MedEspera: The 5th International Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors, May 14-17, 2014, Chisinau, Republic of Moldova |
URI: | http://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/18032 |
Appears in Collections: | MedEspera 2014
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