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Classify BDI. What are the steps to prevent BDI. Outline the principle of management of BDI [TU 2065/5, 73/7]
Describe the grading and management of biliary injury. [TU 2064/12]
Classify Bile Duct Injury (BDI). What are the steps to prevent BDI? [TU 2064/5 , 63/12 ,61/12]
Enumerate the various factors predisposing to bile duct injury during cholecystetctomy. Discuss the steps to prevent it. [TU 2057]
Strasberg classification of bile duct injury?
- (A) Bile leak from cystic duct stump or minor biliary radical in gallbladder fossa.
- (B) Occluded right posterior sectoral duct.
- (C) Bile leak from divided right posterior sectoral duct.
- (D) Bile leak from main bile duct without major tissue loss.
- Bismuth Classification
- (E1) Transected main bile duct with a stricture more than 2 cm from the hilus.
- (E2) Transected main bile duct with a stricture less than 2 cm from the hilus.
- (E3) Stricture of the hilus with right and left ducts in communication.
- (E4) Stricture of the hilus with separation of right and left ducts.
- (E5) Stricture of the main bile duct and the right posterior sectoral duct.
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Stewart-Way Classification
Class I - CBD is mistaken for the cystic duct, but the error is recognized before CBD is divided.
Class II - damage to CHD from clips or cautery used too close to the duct. This often occurs in cases where visibility is limited due to inflammation or bleeding.
Class III - the most common type, CBD is mistaken for the cystic duct. The common duct is transected and a variable portion including the junction of the cystic and common duct is excised or removed.
Class IV - damage to the right hepatic duct (RHD), either because this structure is mistaken for the cystic duct, or because it is injured during dissection
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Strategies for Minimizing Bile Duct Injuries -Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons (SAGES) Safe Cholecystectomy Program
- 1. Use the Critical View of Safety (CVS) method of identification of the cystic duct and cystic artery during laparoscopic cholecystectomy
- 2. Consider an Intra-operative Time-Out during laparoscopic cholecystectomy prior to clipping, cutting or transecting any ductal structures.
- 3. Understand the potential for aberrant anatomy in all cases.
- 4. Make liberal use of cholangiography or other methods to image the biliary tree intraoperatively
- 5. Recognize when the dissection is approaching a zone of significant risk and halt the dissection before entering the zone. Finish the operation by a safe method other than cholecystectomy if conditions around the gallbladder are too dangerous.
- 6. Get help from another surgeon when the dissection or conditions are difficult.
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Rules of thumb to help prevent bile duct injuries.
- Technique
- Use high-quality imaging equipment
- Before starting the dissection, use the triangle of Calot for orientation; find the cystic duct, starting at the triangle
- Pull the gall bladder infundibulum laterally to open the triangle of Calot
- Clear the medial wall of the gall bladder infundibulum
- Make sure the cystic duct can be traced uninterrupted into the base of the gall bladder.
- Open any subtle tissue plane between the gall bladder and presumed cystic duct; the real cystic duct may be hidden in there
- Factors that suggest one may be dissecting the common duct instead of the cystic duct:
- The duct is not fully encompassed by a standard 9-mm clip
- Any duct that can be traced without interruption to course behind the duodenum is probably the CBD
- The presence of another unexpected ductal structure
- A large artery behind the duct – the right hepatic artery runs posterior to the CBD
- Extra lymphatic and vascular structures found in the dissection
- The proximal hepatic ducts fail to opacify on operative cholangiograms
- Obtain operative cholangiograms liberally Whenever the anatomy is confusing
- When inflammation and adhesions result in a difficult dissection
- Whenever a biliary anomaly is suspected; assume that what appears to be anomalous anatomy is really normal and confusing until proved otherwise by cholangiograms
Convert to an open procedure when inflammation or bleeding obscures the anatomy
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Waltman Walters Syndrome?
- Accumulation of bile in the right subphrenic or subhepatic space after a Cholecystectomy or bile duct injury.
- It is characterized by upper abdominal or chest pain associated with tachycardia and persistently low blood pressure due to compression on IVC, that can be mistaken for coronary thrombosis.
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Discuss the principles of management for bile leak after lapaoscopic cholecystectomy. [TU 2071]
Management of bile duct Injury recognised at the time of cholecystectomy
When bile duct injury is suspected intraoperatively, conversion to an open operation and use of cholangiography help delineate management
- Small duct
- Ducts < 3 mm that by cholangiography drain only a single segment or sub-segment of liver, simple ligation should suffice for management.
- Ducts > 3 mm - usually drain more than a single segment of liver and thus, if transected, should be re-implanted into the biliary tree.
Larger duct -
I) Not caused by electrocautery and involves less than 50% of the circumference of the wall - T tube placed through the injury
- II) Cautery injury or an injury involving more than 50% of the duct circumference - resection of the injured segment with anastomosis to reestablish biliary enteric continuity.
- A) Defect < 1 cm and not near the hepatic duct bifurcation - mobilization with end-to-end anastomosis of the bile accompanied with trans anastomotic T tube placement. The tube should be inserted through a separate choledochotomy,and not exit the bile duct though the anastomosis.
- B) Injuries adjacent to the bifurcation or involve > 1-cm defect between the ends of the bile duct - require reanastomosis to the gastrointestinal tract.
- i) Low injuries to the bile duct - tension free Choledochoduodenostomy
- ii) Higher in the biliary tree, close to the hilum - Roux-en-Y HJ
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Goals of Therapy if bile duct Injury is Identified after cholecystectomy?
- 1. Control of infection, limiting inflammation
- • Parenteral antibiotics
- • Percutaneous drainage of periportal fluid collections
- 2. Clear and thorough delineation of entire biliary anatomy
- • MRCP or PTC
- • ERCP (especially if cystic duct stump leak is suspected)
- 3. Reestablishment of biliary-enteric continuity
- • Tension-free, mucosa-to-mucosa anastomosis
- • Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy
- • Long-term transanastomotic stents if bifurcation or higher is involved
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Methods of Bilioenteric Bypass?
- Blumgart Kelley - end to side HJ
- Segment III bypass
- Hepp Couinard technique
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