SURGICAL TREATMENT OF CHOLEDOCHAL CYST
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 149 (1) , 36-42
Abstract
Infants and children (11) with choledochal cyst were evaluated for operative resection of the cyst as the primary surgical therapy. Total excision and biliary reconstruction by choledochojejunostomy were successfully performed in 9 patients. Simple intestinal drainage of the cyst was used in 2 instances because of severe liver disease. Patients (4) had coexisting biliary malformations. In all 5 infants, liver biopsy was consistent with biliary atresia. The extrahepatic bile ducts proximal to the cyst were obliterated in 2 infants. Pathogenesis of choledochal cyst may be different in infants than in older children. The indications for excision of the cyst in 4 patients were due to complications from earlier internal drainage procedures. In most patients, including all those having had a cystoenterostomy earlier, resection was done from the inside of the cyst, minimizing the danger of injury to the neighboring vascular structures. There were no operative deaths, and morbidity was minor. The traditional operation for a choledochal cyst was internal drainage of the cyst into the intestine. Because of the high incidence of late complications and the frequent association of major-coexisting biliary malformations, the procedure should be reserved for highly specific indications. Total surgical excision is the procedure of choice for a choledochal cyst.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biliary carcinoma associated with biliary cystsCancer, 1977
- Malignant Tumors in Choledochal CystsAnnals of Surgery, 1977