Biliary fistula
Biliary fistula | |
---|---|
Duodeno Biliary Fistula | |
Specialty | General surgery |
A biliary fistula is a type of
- bilioenteric fistula: abnormal connection to small bowel, usually duodenum.
- thoracobiliary fistula: abnormal connection to pleural space or bronchus (rare).
- bronchobiliary fistula: pathological communication between a bronchus and the biliary tract (extremely rare).[1]
These may be contrasted to a
Signs and symptoms
A biliary fistula often occurs or may be suspected in a person who has recently undergone a surgical procedure. Pain may occur if the leaked bile is also infected, which can subsequently lead to biliary peritonitis.
Brochobilary fistula is challenging because patients may experience repeat chest infections, pleural effusion, and perihepatic abdominal collection. Such patients usually present with bilioptysis (presence of bile in sputum), persistent cough, chest infections, or respiratory distress due to pleural effusion. Bilioptysis is the pathognomonic clinical feature of BBF.[1]
Extensive ascites may accumulate, especially in the setting of sterile bile leakage, which is often asymptomatic in nature.
Causes
It can occur as a complication following biliary
Diagnosis
For bronchobiliary fistula, the following tests are performed: 1) ultrasound abdomen, may show subdiaphragmatic collection around the surface of the right lobe of the liver. 2) preoperative chest X-ray, may demonstrate mild to moderate right-sided pleural effusion without an active lung pathology. 3) CT scan, may reveal focal collection along the liver's right lateral margin, which can be communicating with one of the right lower lobe bronchi, supporting the diagnosis of a BBF.[1]
Treatment
Cholecystectomy with a choledochoplasty is the most frequent treatment of primary fistulas, whereas the bile duct drainage or the endoscopic stenting is the best choice in case of minor iatrogenic bile duct injuries.[3]
See also
References
- ^ doi:10.35975/apic.v25i3.1517 (inactive 31 January 2024) – via www.apicareonline.com.)
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: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of January 2024 (link - PMID 17729415.
- PMID 26819608.