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Biliary abnormalities associated with extrahepatic portal venous obstruction

✍ Scribed by Professor Mohammed Sultan Khuroo; Ghulam Nabi Yattoo; Showkat Ali Zargar; Gul Javid; Mohammed Yousuf Dar; Bashir Ahmed Khan; Mohammed Iqbal Boda


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
809 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
0270-9139

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✦ Synopsis


We prospectively studied 2 1 consecutive patients with extrahepatic portal venous obstruction for evidence of biliary tract disease. Two patients were first seen with extrahepatic cholestasis; another had recurrent cholangitis. All three patients with clinically manifest biliary disease were adults. Another five patients had icterus on clinical examination. Liver function tests revealed elevated bilirubin levels in 14 patients (66.6%), elevated alkaline phosphatase levels in 17 (80.9%) and elevated serum ALT levels in 8 (38.0%). Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography revealed abnormal findings in 17 patients (80.9%). The changes involved the common bile duct (66.6%) more often than they did the hepatic bile ducts (38.1%). Cholangiographic abnormalities included strictures (52.4%), caliber irregularity (23.8%), segmental upstream dilatation (42.8%), ectasia (9.5%), collateral veins causing extraluminal bile duct impressions (14.3%), displacement of ducts (9.5%), angulation of ducts (4.7%) and pruning of intrahepatic ducts (9.5%).

The pathogenesis of such cholangiographic abnormalities is unknown. However, possible factors in such changes include collateral veins bridging the blocked portal vein, causing bile duct impressions; fibrous scarring of porta hepatis, causing angulation of bile duct; and ischemic injury to bile duct, leading to stricture formation and caliber irregularity. Biliary disease is important in the clinical outcome of patients with extrahepatic portal venous obstruction because variceal sclerotherapy has prolonged the life expectancies of such patients. (HEPATOLOGY 1993;17:807-813.) Extrahepatic portal venous obstruction (EHPVO) is a common cause of portal hypertension. Thirty percent of cases of portal hypertension in all age groups are due to EHPVO (11, whereas in children EHPVO is the most common cause of portal hypertension (2). Known childhood causes are omphalitis, umbilical vein catheterization and intraabdominal sepsis (2, 3). Association of other congenital abnormalities suggests that some cases of EHPVO are congenital (4). Nearly half of all


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