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      Bile duct injuries during laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Factors that influence the results of treatment.

      Archives of surgery (Chicago, Ill. : 1960)
      Adult, Aged, Anastomosis, Roux-en-Y, adverse effects, Anastomosis, Surgical, methods, Bile Ducts, injuries, surgery, Catheterization, Cholangiopancreatography, Endoscopic Retrograde, Cholangitis, etiology, Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic, Female, Humans, Intraoperative Complications, Length of Stay, Male, Middle Aged, Stents, Treatment Outcome

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          Abstract

          To analyze the treatment of bile duct injuries during laparoscopic cholecystectomy to discern the factors affecting outcome. An analysis of the treatment of 88 patients with laparoscopic bile duct injuries. A university hospital. Eighty-eight patients with major bile duct injuries following laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Success of treatment, morbidity rate, mortality rate, and length of illness. Operations to repair bile duct injuries were unsuccessful in 27 (96%) of 28 procedures when cholangiograms were not obtained preoperatively, and they were unsuccessful in 69% when cholangiographic data were incomplete. In some cases, lack of complete cholangiographic information led to an inappropriate and harmful operation. When cholangiographic data were complete, the first repair was successful in 16 (84%) of 19 patients. A primary end-to-end repair over a T tube (13 patients) was unsuccessful in every case in which the duct had been divided. Direct closure of a partial defect in the duct was successful in four of seven patients. Fifty-four (63%) of 84 Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomies were successful. Factors responsible for the unsuccessful outcomes were the following: incomplete excision of the scarred duct, use of nonabsorbable suture material, use of two-layer anastomosis, and failure to eradicate subhepatic infection before the attempted repair. Dilatation and stenting was uniformly unsuccessful as primary treatment (three patients) and was unsuccessful in only seven of 26 patients following a previous operative repair. Patients first treated by the primary surgeon had an average length of illness of 222 days (P < .01). Only 17% of primary repair attempts and no secondary repair attempts performed by the laparoscopic surgeon were successful. Patients whose first repair was performed by tertiary care biliary surgeons had a length of illness of 78 days (P < .01), and 45 (94%) of 48 repairs by tertiary care biliary surgeons were successful. Surgeons who specialize in the repair of bile duct injuries achieve much better results than those with less experience. The worse results of other surgeons could be attributed in many instances to specific correctable errors. Nonsurgical treatment was usually unsuccessful and substantially increased the duration of disability.

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