Extracorporeal Biliary Lithotripsy
- 15 January 1990
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American College of Physicians in Annals of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 112 (2) , 126-137
- https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-112-2-126
Abstract
To identify the technical and physical principles of extracorporeal biliary lithotripsy that are clinically relevant, and to review the patient series published to date. Studies published since 1983 identified through a computerized search of MEDLINE and extensive hand searching of bibliographies in identified articles. Twenty-nine studies done in vitro or in animals and 21 studies in humans assessing biliary lithotripsy. Based on an understanding of experimental determinants of fragmentation, we assess and explain the differences in the results from the clinical studies. The conclusions concerning overall clinical efficacy and safety are emphasized. Extracorporeal shock waves will safely fragment the gallstones of 80% to 100% of selected patients. However, the rate of satisfactory fragmentation (defined as the persistence of fragments only 3 to 5 mm in diameter or less) varies widely among the studies (22% to 78%); this discrepancy depends partly on differing characteristics of stone populations. For patients presenting with solitary stones of 20 mm in diameter or less, 90% will be stone-free within 6 to 9 months after lithotripsy; moreover, the success of lithotripsy determines the rapidity and extent of fragment dissolution. Bile-duct-stone lithotripsy is reserved for patients in whom endoscopic stone extraction and intracorporeal lithotripsy, with or without direct contact dissolution, have failed. Lithotripsy achieves ductal clearance in 55% to 85% of patients. Extracorporeal lithotripsy is safe and effective in selected patients, and has a definite role to play in managing patients with biliary stone disease. Its role in the coming years will depend on technical improvements in the generators, a tailored approach to complementary dissolution or extraction, and effective prophylactic therapy for preventing gallstone recurrence.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gallstone disappearance after extracorporeal lithotripsy and oral bile acid dissolutionGastroenterology, 1989
- Gallbladder Motility Before and After Extracorporeal Shock-Wave LithotripsyGastroenterology, 1989
- Fragmentation of bile duct stones by extracorporeal shock wavesGastroenterology, 1989
- Gallbladder lithotripsy: retrograde dissolution of fragmentsGastrointestinal Endoscopy, 1988
- Simvastatin, a competitive inhibitor of HMG-CoA reductase, lowers cholesterol saturation index of gallbladder bileHepatology, 1988
- Whither biliary sludge?Gastroenterology, 1988
- Fragmentation of gallstones using extracorporeal shock waves: An in Vitro studyHepatology, 1988
- Biological effects of shock waves: Lung hemorrhage by shock waves in dogs—pressure dependenceUltrasound in Medicine & Biology, 1987
- Microsecond‐long flash photography of laser‐induced ablation of biliary and urinary calculiLasers in Surgery and Medicine, 1987
- Minicholecystostomy and radiologic stone extraction in high-risk cholelithiasis patients: Preliminary experienceThe American Journal of Surgery, 1985