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      Current diagnosis and treatment of benign biliary strictures after living donor liver transplantation.

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          Abstract

          Despite advances in surgical techniques, benign biliary strictures after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) remain a significant biliary complication and play an important role in graft and patient survival. Benign biliary strictures after transplantation are classified into anastomotic or non-anastomotic strictures. These two types differ in presentation, outcome, and response to therapy. The leading causes of biliary strictures include impaired blood supply, technical errors during surgery, and biliary anomalies. Because patients usually have non-specific symptoms, a high index of suspicion should be maintained. Magnetic resonance cholangiography has gained widespread acceptance as a reliable noninvasive tool for detecting biliary complications. Endoscopy has played an increasingly prominent role in the diagnosis and treatment of biliary strictures after LDLT. Endoscopic management in LDLT recipients may be more challenging than in deceased donor liver transplantation patients because of the complex nature of the duct-to-duct reconstruction. Repeated aggressive endoscopic treatment with dilation and the placement of multiple plastic stents is considered the first-line treatment for biliary strictures. Percutaneous and surgical treatments are now reserved for patients for whom endoscopic management fails and for those with multiple, inaccessible intrahepatic strictures or Roux-en-Y anastomoses. Recent advances in enteroscopy enable treatment, even in these latter cases. Direct cholangioscopy, another advanced form of endoscopy, allows direct visualization of the inner wall of the biliary tree and is expected to facilitate stenting or stone extraction. Rendezvous techniques can be a good option when the endoscopic approach to the biliary stricture is unfeasible. These developments have resulted in almost all patients being managed by the endoscopic approach.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          World J. Gastroenterol.
          World journal of gastroenterology
          Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.
          2219-2840
          1007-9327
          Jan 28 2016
          : 22
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Jae Hyuck Chang, Inseok Lee, Myung-Gyu Choi, Sok Won Han, Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 137-701, South Korea.
          Article
          10.3748/wjg.v22.i4.1593
          4721991
          26819525
          93b415d2-dd3d-4bd7-bba0-2544752b5fe5
          History

          Percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography,Living donor liver transplantation,Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography,Biliary strictures,Biliary complication

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