Background: Endoscopic extraction of bile duct stones after sphincterotomy has a success rate of up to 95%. Failures occur in patients with extremely large stones, intrahepatic stones, and bile duct ...strictures. This study examined the efficacy and the safety of extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy in a large cohort of patients in whom routine endoscopic measures including mechanical lithotripsy had failed to extract bile duct stones. Methods: Out of 1587 consecutive patients, endoscopic stone extraction including mechanical lithotripsy was unsuccessful in 313 (20%). These 313 patients (64% women, median age, 73 years) underwent high-energy extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy. Stone targeting was performed fluoroscopically (99%) or by ultrasonography (1%). Results: Complete clearance of bile duct calculi was achieved in 281 (90%) patients. In 80% of the patients, the fragments were extracted endoscopically after shock-wave therapy; spontaneous passage was observed in 10%. For patients with complete clearance compared with those without there were no differences with regard to size or number of the stones, intrahepatic or extrahepatic stone location, presence or absence of bile duct strictures, or type of lithotripter. Cholangitis (n = 4) and acute cholecystitis (n = 1) were the rare adverse effects. Conclusions: In patients with bile duct calculi that are difficult to extract endoscopically, high-energy extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy is a safe and effective therapy regardless of stone size, stone location, or the presence of bile duct stricture. (Gastrointest Endosc 2001;53:27-32.)
Refractory or recurrent ascites is a clinical challenge frequently encountered in patients with cirrhosis.
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The treatment options are repeated large-volume paracentesis, creation of a ...peritoneovenous shunt, creation of a portosystemic shunt, and liver transplantation.
Elevated portal-vein pressure is a main factor in the pathogenesis of ascites. A reduction in pressure by means of the surgical creation of a portosystemic shunt
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or transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt
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has been shown to be followed by decreased formation of ascites. With the exception of a small, randomized study
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that found an increased rate of death among patients with ascites who were . . .
Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy combined with adjuvant bile-acid dissolution therapy results in complete clearance of stone fragments in a high percentage of selected patients with radiolucent ...gallbladder calculi. With the gallbladder in situ, these patients are at risk of stone recurrence. Therefore, the early rate of stone recurrence after successful lithotripsy was evaluated. Fifty-eight of the first 60 consecutive patients who became stone free underwent follow-up examinations at least 1 yr (range, 12-37 mo; mean +/- SD, 18 +/- 6) after discontinuation of adjuvant bile-acid therapy. Five patients reported recurrent biliary pain within 1 yr after lithotripsy, and recurrent gallstones were detected. Fifty-three patients were asymptomatic during the first yr, and no recurrence was detected. Thus, the rate of gallstone recurrence was 9% within 1 yr. The rate of gallstone recurrence up to 3 yr was estimated by actuarial analysis. The probability of stone recurrence was 11% (+/- 4%) at 1.5 yr, and no further increase was observed up to 3 yr. Gallstone recurrence within 1 yr after successful shock-wave therapy has to be expected in approximately the same percentage of patients as has been reported in earlier postdissolution trials. It causes recurrent biliary pain in most cases.
To compare findings with magnetic resonance (MR) cholangiography with rapid acquisition with relaxation enhancement (RARE) and half-Fourier acquisition with single-shot turbo spin-echo (hereafter, ...half Fourier RARE) snapshot imaging techniques to those with endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC).
Heavily T2-weighted thick-section (RARE) and thin-section (half-Fourier RARE) MR cholangiography were performed prospectively, on a 1.5-T imager, in the biliary tree of 61 consecutive patients before ERC. Findings at ERC were considered the standard of reference. The radiologist and endoscopist were blinded to each other's report. On- and off-site MR cholangiographic readings were performed to detect stones (n = 24), biliary dilatation (n = 34), or stenosis (n = 36).
The sensitivity and specificity of MR cholangiography, respectively, calculated on a lesion-by-lesion basis, were 92.3% and 95.8% for cholangiolithiasis, 94.1% and 92.6% for duct dilatation, and 88.8% and 84.0% for stenosis. With snapshot MR cholangiography, on a patient-by-patient basis, differentiation between normal (n = 15) and abnormal (n = 46) results yielded a sensitivity of 92.4%, a specificity of 83.4%, and a positive predictive value of 95.6%. Pitfalls were caused by flow artifacts, compression by vessels, and low contrast between calculi and surrounding parenchyma.
Snapshot MR cholangiography allowed noninvasive, accurate detection of biliary stones, strictures, and dilatation similar to that with ERC. Discrepancies regarding low-grade dilatation and strictures had no clinical relevance at retrospective review.
We report four consecutive cases in which postoperative cutaneous biliary fistulas were treated successfully by an endoscopically placed nasobiliary tube or an endoprosthesis. This simple and ...effective method should be considered in selected patients as a viable alternative to established surgical procedures.
To substantiate the early results of extracorporeal shock-wave fragmentation of gallstones, we used this nonsurgical procedure to treat 175 patients with radiolucent gallbladder calculi. ...Chenodeoxycholic acid and ursodeoxycholic acid were administered as adjuvant litholytic therapy. The gallstones disintegrated in all patients except one and completely disappeared in 30 percent of all patients within 2 months after lithotripsy, in 48 percent at 2 to 4 months, in 63 percent at 4 to 8 months, in 78 percent at 8 to 12 months, and in 91 percent at 12 to 18 months. In patients with solitary stones up to 20 mm in diameter, the corresponding values were 45, 69, 78, 86, and 95 percent, respectively. Shock-wave therapy had no adverse effects except cutaneous petechiae (14 percent) and transient gross hematuria (3 percent). One third of the patients had one or more episodes of biliary colic before all the fragments disappeared. Two patients had mild pancreatitis, which necessitated endoscopic sphincterotomy in one. The patient with insufficient stone fragmentation underwent elective cholecystectomy; no additional operations were necessary. Extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy combined with medical therapy for stone dissolution is a safe and effective treatment in selected patients with radiolucent gallbladder calculi.
To evaluate the long-term results of three types of shock wave treatment in patients with radiolucent gallbladder stones.
Cohort study.
Single-center trial.
Of 5824 patients with gallstones, 19% were ...eligible; 711 patients were treated.
Patients received extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy as well as adjuvant therapy with bile acids.
Lithotripsy was done in three ways, using a water-tank lithotriptor (group A), a water-cushion lithotriptor at low energy levels (group B), and a water-cushion lithotriptor at high energy levels (group C). The rate of complete fragment clearance 9 to 12 months after lithotripsy was done differed significantly among the three groups: Among patients with single stones of 20 mm or less in diameter, the rate of fragment clearance for group A was 76%; for group B, it was 60%; and for group C, it was 83% (P = 0.03). Among patients with single stones of 21 to 30 mm, the rate of fragment clearance for group A was 63%; for group B, it was 32%; and for group C, it was 58% (P less than 0.005). Among patients with two or three stones, the rate of fragment clearance for group A was 38%; for group B, it was 16%; and for group C, it was 46% (P = 0.01). Patients with fragments of 3 mm or less 24 hours after lithotripsy was done showed a higher probability of fragment disappearance than did those with larger fragments (P less than 0.001). The clearance rate was higher in patients who were compliant than in those who were noncompliant with bile acid therapy (P less than 0.001). Adverse effects included liver hematoma in 1 patients, biliary pain attacks in 253 patients (36%), mild biliary pancreatitis in 13 patients (2%), and cholestasis in 7 patients (1%). Elective cholecystectomy was done in 16 patients (2%), and endoscopic sphincterotomy was done in 4 patients (1%).
The rate of complete disappearance of stones after shock wave therapy depends on the size and the number of the initial stones, the diameter of the largest fragment, and the mode of shock wave treatment. Adjuvant therapy with bile acids appears to be important for complete fragment clearance.
We treated nine patients with functioning gallbladders containing one to three symptomatic radiolucent stones not larger than 25 mm in diameter, as well as five patients with stones in the common ...bile duct that were not removable by endoscopic procedures, by means of extracorporeally generated shock waves during general anesthesia. The patients with gallbladder stones received adjuvant treatment with a combination of ursodeoxycholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid. All gallbladder stones were disintegrated into sludge or fragments with diameters of no more than 8 mm. In six of the nine patients the fragments disappeared completely within 1 to 25 weeks. No adverse effects were detected during a follow-up period of 10 to 34 weeks, except transient biliary pain in two patients, with mild pancreatitis in one. In four of the five patients with common-bile-duct stones, shock-wave treatment permitted stone disintegration and successful endoscopic extraction or spontaneous passage of fragments. We conclude that gallstone disease may be treated successfully and without serious adverse effects by extracorporeally generated shock waves in selected patients.
The long-term outcome of nonoperative gallstone therapy depends on both absence of stones and absence of biliary pain. The aim of the present study was to determine the rate of stone recurrence and ...the rate of symptoms within 5 years after successful shock wave lithotripsy combined with bile acid therapy.
One hundred consecutive patients (single stones, n = 89; 2 or 3 stones, n = 11) were followed up for a median of 4.3 years after stone disappearance and discontinuation of bile acids.
Twenty-three of the 100 patients developed recurrent stones. Calculated by actuarial analysis, the recurrence rate was 7% +/- 3%, 11% +/- 3%, 13% +/- 4%, 20% +/- 5%, and 31% +/- 7% (mean +/- SD) at 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 years, respectively. The recurrent stones were small (6 +/- 5 mm) and were associated with recurrent biliary pain in 14 (61%) of the 23 patients. Repeated shock wave lithotripsy and/or bile acid medication resulted in stone disappearance in only 10 of 20 patients with recurrence.
The long-term rate of stone recurrence after lithotripsy of primarily solitary gallbladder calculi is lower than expected from post-bile acid dissolution trials. Recurrence of stones frequently is associated with recurrence of biliary pain.