Late morbidity after duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection with bile duct reinsertion into the resection cavity.

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Late morbidity after duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection with bile duct reinsertion into the resection cavity. / Cataldegirmen, G; Bogoevski, Dean; Mann, Oliver; Kaifi, Jussuf; Izbicki, Jakob R.; Yekebas, Emre F.

in: BRIT J SURG, Jahrgang 95, Nr. 4, 4, 2008, S. 447-452.

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@article{a619d21707f447f5a2c50ea435b9315e,
title = "Late morbidity after duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection with bile duct reinsertion into the resection cavity.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Reinsertion of the distal common bile duct (CBD) into the pancreatic resection cavity during duodenum-preserving pancreatic head excision (DPPHE) may be an alternative option to Whipple resection or bilioenteric anastomosis when chronic pancreatitis is associated with CBD stenosis. METHODS: Outcome in 82 patients with chronic pancreatitis who underwent DPPHE with CBD reinsertion was compared with that in 432 who had DPPHE without reinsertion and 50 who had a Whipple procedure or pylorus-preserving pancreatoduodenectomy (PPPD). RESULTS: There were no deaths after DPPHE with CBD reinsertion, compared with four (0.9 per cent) after DPPHE without reinsertion and three (6 per cent) after classical resection. Overall morbidity rates were 30, 28.9 and 36 per cent respectively. Fifteen patients (18 per cent) who had DPPHE with CBD reinsertion developed a stricture at the reinsertion site, compared with a long-term stricture rate of 2.3 per cent (ten patients) after DPPHE without CBD reinsertion and 4 per cent (two patients) after PPPD/Whipple resection. CONCLUSION: Although associated with a high incidence of anastomotic stricture, reinsertion of the CBD into the resection cavity as part of DPPHE can be used to preserve duodenal passage and offers an alternative to extended resection for chronic pancreatitis.",
author = "G Cataldegirmen and Dean Bogoevski and Oliver Mann and Jussuf Kaifi and Izbicki, {Jakob R.} and Yekebas, {Emre F.}",
year = "2008",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "95",
pages = "447--452",
journal = "BRIT J SURG",
issn = "0007-1323",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Late morbidity after duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection with bile duct reinsertion into the resection cavity.

AU - Cataldegirmen, G

AU - Bogoevski, Dean

AU - Mann, Oliver

AU - Kaifi, Jussuf

AU - Izbicki, Jakob R.

AU - Yekebas, Emre F.

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - BACKGROUND: Reinsertion of the distal common bile duct (CBD) into the pancreatic resection cavity during duodenum-preserving pancreatic head excision (DPPHE) may be an alternative option to Whipple resection or bilioenteric anastomosis when chronic pancreatitis is associated with CBD stenosis. METHODS: Outcome in 82 patients with chronic pancreatitis who underwent DPPHE with CBD reinsertion was compared with that in 432 who had DPPHE without reinsertion and 50 who had a Whipple procedure or pylorus-preserving pancreatoduodenectomy (PPPD). RESULTS: There were no deaths after DPPHE with CBD reinsertion, compared with four (0.9 per cent) after DPPHE without reinsertion and three (6 per cent) after classical resection. Overall morbidity rates were 30, 28.9 and 36 per cent respectively. Fifteen patients (18 per cent) who had DPPHE with CBD reinsertion developed a stricture at the reinsertion site, compared with a long-term stricture rate of 2.3 per cent (ten patients) after DPPHE without CBD reinsertion and 4 per cent (two patients) after PPPD/Whipple resection. CONCLUSION: Although associated with a high incidence of anastomotic stricture, reinsertion of the CBD into the resection cavity as part of DPPHE can be used to preserve duodenal passage and offers an alternative to extended resection for chronic pancreatitis.

AB - BACKGROUND: Reinsertion of the distal common bile duct (CBD) into the pancreatic resection cavity during duodenum-preserving pancreatic head excision (DPPHE) may be an alternative option to Whipple resection or bilioenteric anastomosis when chronic pancreatitis is associated with CBD stenosis. METHODS: Outcome in 82 patients with chronic pancreatitis who underwent DPPHE with CBD reinsertion was compared with that in 432 who had DPPHE without reinsertion and 50 who had a Whipple procedure or pylorus-preserving pancreatoduodenectomy (PPPD). RESULTS: There were no deaths after DPPHE with CBD reinsertion, compared with four (0.9 per cent) after DPPHE without reinsertion and three (6 per cent) after classical resection. Overall morbidity rates were 30, 28.9 and 36 per cent respectively. Fifteen patients (18 per cent) who had DPPHE with CBD reinsertion developed a stricture at the reinsertion site, compared with a long-term stricture rate of 2.3 per cent (ten patients) after DPPHE without CBD reinsertion and 4 per cent (two patients) after PPPD/Whipple resection. CONCLUSION: Although associated with a high incidence of anastomotic stricture, reinsertion of the CBD into the resection cavity as part of DPPHE can be used to preserve duodenal passage and offers an alternative to extended resection for chronic pancreatitis.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 95

SP - 447

EP - 452

JO - BRIT J SURG

JF - BRIT J SURG

SN - 0007-1323

IS - 4

M1 - 4

ER -