## Abstract Twenty-five patients with pancreatic pseudocysts were treated surgically. The operative mortality was 4 per cent. Morbidity after external drainage was higher (86 per cent) than after internal drainage (36 per cent), mainly due to the presence of chronic postoperative pancreatic fistula
Surgical treatment of chronic pancreatic cholangiopathy
β Scribed by Professor L. Pereira-Lima; A. N. Kalil; T. J. Wilson
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 442 KB
- Volume
- 76
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0007-1323
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β¦ Synopsis
Surgical treatment of chronic pancreatic c h o I a ng i o pa t h y
In a consecutive surgical series of 70 patients with chronic calcifying pancreatitis, 18 presented with $xed stenosis of the terminal common bile duct. Nine patients presented with jaundice and two had a palpable gallbladder. The most relevant laboratory datum in the series was a persistently high serum alkaline phosphatase level. Long tapering of the terminal common bile duct was the characteristic radiological sign in 45 of our patients. In jive of the 18 cases compression of the terminal bile duct was due to cephalic pseudocysts. Hepaticojejunostomy-en-Y was the type of drainage chosen in 16 cases, and an end-to-side technique was used in 15 patients. Side-to-side choledochoduodenostomy was performed in two cases. In 14 patients, biliary drainage was associated with other surgical procedures on the pancreatic parenchyma. N o postoperative complications due to the biliary drainage occurred in this series.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Surgical management of chronic pancreatitis: long-term results in ## I41 patients The management of pancreatic pain is a controversial subject and the treatment recommended varies fiom one extreme to the other. Some authorities advise simply waiting for chronic pancreatitis to 'burn out', while o