Cholelithiasis in pediatric organ transplantation: detection and management.
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Cholelithiasis in pediatric organ transplantation: detection and management. / Ganschow, Rainer.
In: PEDIATR TRANSPLANT, Vol. 6, No. 2, 2, 2002, p. 91-96.Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journal › SCORING: Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Cholelithiasis in pediatric organ transplantation: detection and management.
AU - Ganschow, Rainer
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - The real incidence and the underlying causes of cholelithiasis in pediatric solid organ recipients is probably not exactly known. In addition to well-established risk factors for cholelithiasis, children after heart, kidney, or liver transplantation may develop gallstones due to drug therapy, sepsis, parenteral nutrition, or surgical complications. For pediatric patients, data are very limited and heterogeneous. However, the incidence in pediatric heart recipients seems to be substantially higher compared with kidney or liver graft recipients. In this review article the present data are discussed focusing on incidence, detection, and management of cholelithiasis in pediatric organ transplantation. In general, surgery is the therapy of choice in symptomatic patients; however, the pharmacological profile of ursodeoxycholic acid and the first results on its clinical impact are promising. The value of prophylactic therapy with ursodeoxycholic acid must be determined in further studies.
AB - The real incidence and the underlying causes of cholelithiasis in pediatric solid organ recipients is probably not exactly known. In addition to well-established risk factors for cholelithiasis, children after heart, kidney, or liver transplantation may develop gallstones due to drug therapy, sepsis, parenteral nutrition, or surgical complications. For pediatric patients, data are very limited and heterogeneous. However, the incidence in pediatric heart recipients seems to be substantially higher compared with kidney or liver graft recipients. In this review article the present data are discussed focusing on incidence, detection, and management of cholelithiasis in pediatric organ transplantation. In general, surgery is the therapy of choice in symptomatic patients; however, the pharmacological profile of ursodeoxycholic acid and the first results on its clinical impact are promising. The value of prophylactic therapy with ursodeoxycholic acid must be determined in further studies.
M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz
VL - 6
SP - 91
EP - 96
JO - PEDIATR TRANSPLANT
JF - PEDIATR TRANSPLANT
SN - 1397-3142
IS - 2
M1 - 2
ER -