Biliary injury

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Biliary injury (bile duct injury) is the traumatic damage of the

iatrogenic complication of cholecystectomy (surgical removal of the gallbladder), but can also be caused by other operations or by major trauma. The risk of biliary injury is higher during laparoscopic cholecystectomy than during open cholecystectomy. Biliary injury may lead to several complications and may even cause death if not diagnosed in time and managed properly. Ideally biliary injury should be managed at a center with facilities and expertise in endoscopy, radiology and surgery.[1]

Signs and symptoms

Only about 25 to 40% of bile duct injuries are detected intraoperatively. A biliary stricture, leak, or obstruction may be the injury's outward manifestation. A history of

pruritis, and failure to tolerate diet.[2]

Causes

Biliary tract injuries caused by trauma are uncommon. Intrahepatic injuries occur in conjunction with hepatic injuries in blunt (crushing injuries, direct blows to the abdomen, falls from great heights, vehicular accidents) or penetrating (stabbing and gunshot wounds) abdominal trauma. The prevalence of bile leaks, or biliary injuries, in liver trauma is estimated to be between 4 and 23%.[3]

Iatrogenic injuries are most commonly seen during

laparoscopic cholecystectomy. After conventional open cholecystectomy, the rate of clinically significant bile leaks ranges between 0.1 and 0.3%. Whereas, biliary leakages have increased by up to 3% in the era of laparoscopic cholecystectomy. There are numerous factors that can cause those injuries, including the surgeon's, endoscopist's, or radiologist's inexperience, anatomical variations in the region, which are common, inflammation of the gallbladder and surrounding tissue, which is the most common factor causing error, and as a result injury to the bile duct.[3]

References

See also