کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
4288440 | 1612089 | 2016 | 4 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

• Class E injuries are the most common major bile duct injuries and can cause serious clinical condition including bile leak.
• Iatrogenic operative injuries may be a cause of spontaneous postoperative choledochoduodenal fistula even in transaction type complete injuries.
• Spontaneous closure of a postoperative bile fistula doesn’t guarantee that it is not a transaction type injury.
IntroductionBile leak after cholecystectomy which is the frequency less than 2% is an important problem for patients. Some bile duct injuries occuring after laparoscopic cholecystectomy are the complex bile duct injuries and can cause bile leak and fistula.Presentation of caseA 74-year-old woman has high output bile drainage from abdominal drain after laparoscopic cholecystectomy so an ERCP was performed. It was clear that there was a complete transaction of bile ducts, however this finding was inconsistent with the patient’s clinical situation. The bile drainage of the patient was ceased and she was discharged to home without any problem. Four months later the patient was admitted again for recurrent cholangitis episodes. Patient was operated to perform a biliary-enteric diversion for the suspicion of biliary stricture. There was a thin fistula tract over the duodenum that was previously seperated from the proximal choledochus. The distal part of the bile duct was ended blindly. A hepaticojejunostomy anastomosis over a transhepatic stenting was performed.DiscussionThe circumferential injuries are the most common and devastating injuries leading to bile leak, peritonitis and varying degrees of sepsis. The probability of a bile fistula to close spontaneously is almost impossible in cases of iatrogenic circumferential full thickness injuries.ConclusionIn the present case we have reported a case of Bismuth type 2 (Strasberg type E2) injury in which the biliary drainage was closed spontaneously with the formation of spontaneous biliary-duodenal fistula. It is an extremely interesting case that has not been reported in the literature previously.
Journal: International Journal of Surgery Case Reports - Volume 25, 2016, Pages 199–202