Treatment of Postoperative Bile Leakage in Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy

One of the complications after laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LAP-C) is postoperative bile leakage. Of 800 patients undergoing LAP-C at our institution, bile leakage occurred in 12 (1.5%). Whenever postoperative bile leakage was detected, we conducted direct cholangiography and determined whether the...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inNippon Shokaki Geka Gakkai zasshi Vol. 34; no. 6; pp. 642 - 646
Main Authors Maeda, Dai, Fujisaki, Masato, Takahashi, Takayuki, Hirahata, Shinobu, Wada, Noriaki, Kamei, Syusaku, Ishimaru, Kei, Ishikawa, Taro
Format Journal Article
LanguageJapanese
Published The Japanese Society of Gastroenterological Surgery 2001
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:One of the complications after laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LAP-C) is postoperative bile leakage. Of 800 patients undergoing LAP-C at our institution, bile leakage occurred in 12 (1.5%). Whenever postoperative bile leakage was detected, we conducted direct cholangiography and determined whether there was leakage of the contrast medium, the location of the injury, and its severity. Whenever leakage of the contrast medium was detected, if biliary injury was severe, we conducted laparotomy and biliary tract reconstruction. If biliary injury was not severe, we conducted biliary drainage by endoscopic nasobiliary drainage or percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage and conducted conservative treatment. If leakage of the contract medium was not detected, we conducted only abdominal drainage and observed the clinical course. In this article, we report 7 cases in which leakage of the contrast medium was detected and we conducted biliary drainage and treated the cases conservatively. The average time from the drainage operation until bile leakage stopped was 7.6 days. Since biliary drainage heals bile leakage within a short time and reduces the necessity of operative reintervention in the biliary tract, it is effective in treatment and has the merit of low invasiveness.
ISSN:0386-9768
1348-9372
DOI:10.5833/jjgs.34.642