One hundred and twenty consecutive deeply jaundiced patients undergoing surgery for bile duct obstruction were analysed. Diagnosis by either ultrasound or percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography was correct in 84 per cent and 86 per cent of patients respectively. Combination of the two procedures resulted in a diagnostic accuracy of 96.5 per cent. Despite pre-operative antibiotics and intravenous fluids, including Mannitol, infective complications and renal failure were common. Gastrointestinal haemorrhage was a major cause of postoperative morbidity and mortality. The operative mortality in this series was 14.2 per cent and was related to the depth of jaundice in patients with benign disease. The same relationship did not appear to occur in those with malignant disease. The median survival after palliative bypass surgery in patients with malignant obstruction was 6.5 months.
The biliary tract has been prospectively studied in a consecutive series of 769 patients undergoing surgery for gallstones to determine whether differences exist between subjects with and without a history of acute pancreatitis. The incidence of acute gallstone pancreatitis (AGP) was 7.7 per cent and men with gallstones were significantly more likely to develop pancreatic inflammation. Operations on patients with AGP were accompanied by a higher mortality rate which was almost entirely due to the severity of the disease at the time of surgery. The earlier operations were performed after the onset of pancreatitis the more often stones were found in the common bile duct and at the ampulla. Patients with AGP had smaller and more numerous gallbladder stones in association with a wider cystic duct that controls. The common bile duct diameter in patients with AGP was independent of the presence of choledochal calculi implying either previous temporary obstruction to the biliary tree or a dilated duct ab initio. Pancreatic duct reflux was far more commonly observed on the cholangiograms of patients with AGP and in these patients reflux occurred into a wider pancreatic duct, at a greater angle and was associated with a longer functioning common channel. No patient developed recurrent pancreatitis following biliary surgery. These features strongly support the concept of gallstone migration and suggest that patients with gallstones who develop acute pancreatitis have essential differences in their biliary tree which mechanically facilitate migration of calculi.
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