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  Vol. 137 No. 8, August 2002 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Long-term Biliary Function After Reconstruction of Major Bile Duct Injuries With Hepaticoduodenostomy or Hepaticojejunostomy

Robert J. Moraca, MD; Faye T. Lee, RN; John A. Ryan, Jr, MD; L. William Traverso, MD

Arch Surg. 2002;137:889-894.

Hypothesis  Normal biliary function can be achieved after reconstruction for major bile duct injuries using either hepaticoduodenostomy (HD) or Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy (HJ).

Design  Retrospective analysis of consecutive patients requiring biliary enteric reconstructions from February 1, 1993, through January 1, 2002, for bile duct injuries.

Setting  Academic multispecialty referral clinic.

Patients  Twenty-seven consecutive patients were evaluated who underwent biliary enteric reconstruction for bile duct injury caused during cholecystectomy. Patients were reconstructed either by HD (18 patients) or HJ (9 patients).

Interventions  Patients' medical records were reviewed and long-term evaluations were obtained via telephone questionnaire by 2 separate observers (R.J.M. and F.T.L.). Biliary function was evaluated in all using symptoms and liver function test results. Cholangiography was obtained, if indicated clinically. These were reviewed for stricture or dilatation. Any biliary interventions were recorded.

Main Outcome Measures  Comparison of long-term biliary function after HD vs HJ reconstructions.

Results  All patients were contacted after a median postoperative time of 54 months. Excellent or good results were observed for biliary function in 25 (92%) of the 27 patients. These results were obtained regardless of the type of reconstruction—HD (18 patients) or HJ (9 patients).

Conclusions  We found biliary function to be normal at more than 4 years after biliary-enteric reconstruction for bile duct injury. When surgically feasible, we prefer HD to HJ.


From the Department of General, Vascular, and Thoracic Surgery, Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, Wash.



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