Eighty-nine biliary strictures in 73 patients who had undergone percutaneous balloon dilatation were reviewed to determine long-term patency rates and clinical management problems. The majority of dilatations were performed in patients with anastomotic strictures (n = 44), iatrogenic strictures (n = 28), and strictures associated with sclerosing cholangitis (n = 17). Patency rates after 36 months or more were 67%, 76%, and 42%, respectively. Complications, mostly minor, occurred in less than 7% of patients. Of patients with significant biliary obstruction, 15% had little or no intrahepatic biliary duct dilatation demonstrated by cross-sectional imaging and/or direct cholangiography. No definite conclusions could be drawn about the utility of long-term internal/external stenting.
The cystic duct and gallbladder were ablated in eight patients with acute gallbladder disease who had been treated with minicholecystostomy instead of cholecystectomy because of multiple risk factors. First, endoluminal transcatheter radio-frequency electrocoagulation of the cystic duct was performed under fluoroscopic control, which resulted in complete occlusion in all eight patients. Next, the mucosa of the isolated gallbladder was sclerosed with 95% ethanol and 3% sodium tetradecyl sulfate in one to four sessions; no analgesics were required. The gallbladder volumes of all patients, estimated by means of ultrasound, were 1.5-22 cm3 (average, less than 10 cm3) after a mean follow-up period of 5 months. One patient died of a cerebrovascular accident 15 months after sclerotherapy. In all surviving patients, the gallbladder fistulas are dry and obliterated. These early clinical data indicate that electrocoagulation permits reliable, safe obliteration of the human cystic duct. The authors believe that sclerotherapy of the isolated gallbladder is feasible without toxic effects but that their treatment needs adjustment to achieve complete ablation of the gallbladder mucosa in a shorter period and in all patients.
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