Stones in the common bile duct: experience with medical dissolution therapy
Open Access
- 1 April 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Postgraduate Medical Journal
- Vol. 61 (714) , 313-316
- https://doi.org/10.1136/pgmj.61.714.313
Abstract
Summary: Thirty-one patients with radiolucent common bile duct stones received medical treatment. Nineteen had Rowachol, a terpene preparation, eight (42%) achieving complete stone disappearance within 3 to 48 months. Fifteen (including 3 of the above) took Rowachol with bile acid (chenodeoxycholic in 11, ursodeoxycholic in 4) for 3 to 60 months: 11 (73%) achieved complete dissolution within 18 months. Persistent symptoms and complications settled on conservative management: 8 (25%) patients required admission (2 biliary colic, 1 obstructive jaundice, 4 cholangitis, 1 pancreatitis). One patient died of a myocardial infarction during recovery from pancreatitis; the other continued treatment, 2 achieving complete dissolution/disappearance. Oral dissolution therapy with Rowachol and bile acids should be considered when endoscopic sphincterotomy or surgery is not feasible, but careful attention to potential complications is required while stones persist.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- The insensitivity of sonography in the detection of choledocholithiasisAmerican Journal of Roentgenology, 1984
- Management of stones in the biliary tree.Gut, 1983
- Gall stone dissolving agents.BMJ, 1983
- Ursodeoxycholic acid in the treatment of cholesterol cholelithiasisDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 1982
- Adjunct to bile-acid treatment for gall-stone dissolution: low-dose chenodeoxycholic acid combined with a terpene preparation.BMJ, 1981
- Treatment of biliary duct stones with a terpene preparation.BMJ, 1981
- Chenodeoxycholic AcidDrugs, 1981
- Drip infusion cholangiography using iotroxamide. Double blind comparison with ioglycamideThe British Journal of Radiology, 1980
- Iotroxamide—a new cholangiographic agent. Relation between plasma concentration and biliary excretion in manThe British Journal of Radiology, 1980
- The Medical Treatment of Cholesterol Gallstones: Experience with Chenodeoxycholic AcidDigestion, 1976