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e-Article

Endoscopic management of acute calculous cholangitis
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology. Dec 01, 1997 12(12):874-876
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0815-9319
Abstract
Acute cholangitis is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Endoscopic drainage procedures have been shown to be a safe and effective mode of treatment in acute cholangitis. As there is paucity of large series on endoscopic management of acute cholangitis, a study was performed to evaluate safety and efficiency of endoscopic biliary decompression in acute cholangitis. The study included 89 consecutive patients(mean age 55 ± 15 years; range 35-70 years; 50 males) with acute cholangitis requiring biliary drainage. Main presenting features were upper abdominal pain (84%), fever with chills (90%) and jaundice (74%). Altered sensorium, hypotension, features of peritonitis and acute renal failure were present in 15, 11, 18 and 5%, respectively. Endoscopic procedures performed were endoscopic sphincterotomy (ES) with stone extraction(n = 40); ES with endoscopic nasobiliary drainage (ENBD; n= 30); ENBD without ES (n = 8); and ES with stent placement (n= 11). Of the 89 patients, 85 (95%) responded within 48-72 h. Endoscopic common duct clearance could be achieved in 58 of 78 (74%) patients, whereas in 11 patients undergoing stent placement, stone extraction was not attempted. Complications included post-sphincterotomy bleed (n = 2), retroduodenal perforation (n = 1) and acute pancreatitis (n = 1) with an overall complication rate of 4.4%. All the complications were seen in patients undergoing ES with stone extraction. Mortality was 3.3%. In conclusion, endoscopic biliary drainage is a safe and effective mode of treatment for acute cholangitis. Endoscopic nasobiliary drainage or stent placement is safer than ES in acute cholangitis as an initial step.