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Extrahepatic bile duct injury due to abdominal trauma
Author(s) -
Ker ChenGuo,
Yuan Tong Kwang,
Yuan Chung Jou,
Yuan Chung Yin
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
journal of hepato‐biliary‐pancreatic surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.63
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1868-6982
pISSN - 0944-1166
DOI - 10.1007/bf01212786
Subject(s) - medicine , bile duct , surgery , blunt , laparotomy , common bile duct , abdominal trauma
The diagnosis of bile duct injury due to abdominal trauma is usually not feasible preoperatively, but it must be suspected interoperatively with the presence of bile staining fluid in the subhepatic area. Four patients with bile duct injuries were encountered; these were the results of blunt injury in three and penetrating injury in one. The injury sites were in the common bile duct in two patients, and in the right hepatic duct just proximate to the bifurcation in two patients. One patient was diagnosed on the finding of bile stain discharged from the drainage tube after the first abdominal exploration. The other three patients were diagnosed by the amount of bile stained fluid collected in the subhepatic area during the primary laparotomy. The injuries of the common bile duct were treated by primary repairs and T‐tube choledochostomy in two patients. The other two patients with right hepatic duct injuries were treated by right lobectomy because of extensive liver parenchyma injury. The postoperative courses were smooth and there were no deaths. We reviewed 27 reports (1984–1994) from around the world. The total operative mortality of the 75 patients in these reports was 18.67% (14/75) for the primary operation, and 7.14% (1/14) for re‐operation in patients in whom reoperation was performed due to overlooked injuries or biliary complications.