| Literature DB >> 33596635 |
Hyung Ku Chon1,2, Chan Park3, Tae Hyeon Kim1,2.
Abstract
Mirizzi syndrome is a rare complication of gallbladder disease that can be difficult to treat. In particular, endoscopic treatment often fails because of the inability to access or to capture the impacted cystic duct stone. We report a case of Mirizzi syndrome grade III that was successfully managed by digital single-operator peroral cholangioscopy-guided electrohydraulic lithotripsy with endoscopic nasogallbladder drainage and interval laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Based on our experience, digital single-operator peroral cholangioscopy-guided electrohydraulic lithotripsy with endoscopic nasogallbladder drainage is a feasible minimally invasive approach for the management of high-grade Mirizzi syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: Cholangioscopy; Electrohydraulic lithotripsy; Endoscopic nasogallbladder drainage; Laparoscopic cholecystectomy; Mirizzi syndrome
Year: 2021 PMID: 33596635 PMCID: PMC8652164 DOI: 10.5946/ce.2021.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Endosc ISSN: 2234-2400
Fig. 1.(A) Axial view of an abdominal computed tomography scan shows gallbladder enlargement with inflammatory fat stranding, mucosal enhancement, and gallstones. Coronal view demonstrates dilation of the cystic duct (black arrows) with multiple gallstones (B) and upstream dilation of the common hepatic duct (open black arrows) with enhancement of bile duct wall (C). (D) T2-weight magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography images reveal a cholecysto-cholecochal fistula (white arrow) and dilation of the common hepatic duct (open white arrow) caused by external compression of the impacted stone (black arrow).
Fig. 2.(A) Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) showing Mirizzi syndrome. Note dilation of the cystic duct (open white arrow), dilation of the common hepatic duct (white arrow), and the gallstone (black arrow) impacting the cystic duct. Direct cholangioscopy using the SpyglassTM DS Direct Visualization system (SpyDS) shows the impacted stone (B) and stone fragmented using electrohydraulic lithotripsy (EHL) (C). (D) ERCP shows fragmented stones (white arrowheads) after SpyDS-guided EHL. Note the EHL probe (white arrow) and SpyDS (black arrow). (E) A radiograph showing placement of a nasogallbladder drainage tube into the gallbladder.
Summary of Peroral Cholangioscopy Guided Lithotripsy for Management of Mirizzi Syndrome from English Literature Review
| Study | Study type | Case | Technical success (%) | Type | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Binmoeller et al. (1993) [ | Retrospective | 14 | 100 | Not available | Mother baby endoscope system-guided EHL |
| Tsuyuguchi et al. (2011) [ | Retrospective | 53 | Type I: 0 | Type I: 3 | Mother baby endoscope system-guided EHL or LL |
| Type II: 96 | Type II: 50 | ||||
| Issa et al. (2011) [ | Case report | 2 | 100 | Type I: 2 | Spyglass Direct Visualization System-guided LL |
| Bhandari et al. (2016) [ | Retrospective | 31 | 100 | Type I: 4 | Spyglass Direct Visualization System-guided LL |
| Type II: 17 | |||||
| Type III:10 | |||||
| Present case | Case report | 1 | 100 | Type III: 1 | Spyglass Direct Visualization System-guided EHL |
EHL, electrohydraulic lithotripsy; LL, laser lithotripsy.