Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Biliary surgery in the aged]

Annali italiani di chirurgia(1997)

Cited 30|Views0
No score
Abstract
Between 1980 and 1995 in the Section of General and Oncological Surgery of the Department of Surgery of the University of Catania, on a total of 1715 biliary surgical procedures, 926 were performed on the elderly patients, 287 of which in emergency. Cholelithiasis (469 cases) morbidity 4.5%, mortality 0.4%; acute colecystitis, (247 cases) morbidity 21%, mortality 12%. Choledocholithiasis (122 cases) surgical treatment (51 cases) morbidity 21.6%, mortality 3.9%; endoscopic treatment (71 cases) morbidity 9.4%, mortality 0%. Neoplasms of the biliary tract (48 cases) diagnostic laparotomises 9, surgery (27 cases) morbidity 37%, mortality 11%; endoscopy (12 cases) morbidity 33%, mortality 0%. Acute obstructive cholangitis (34 cases), surgical drainage (9 cases) morbidity 55%, mortality 33%; endoscopic drainage (22 cases) morbidity 14%, mortality 4.8%; transhepatic drainage (3 cases) morbidity 66%, mortality 33%. Acute biliary pancreatitis (6 cases) surgery (2 cases) morbidity 100%, mortality 50%; endoscopy (4 cases) morbidity 25%, mortality 0%. This experience confirms that in elderly patients the treatment of choice for cholelithiasis is cholecystectomy and for acute colecystitis is early cholecistectomy. The preferred treatment of choledocholithiasis and severe acute biliary pancreatitis is endoscopic sphincterectomy. Endoscopic or radiologic drainages are the choice for acute biliary pancreatitis. In conclusion elderly patients with surgical biliary problems should be treated by a surgical, endoscopic and radiological team, taking in account all the available procedures.
More
Translated text
Key words
biliary surgery
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined