| Literature DB >> 34726321 |
Hirotaka Kato1, Hiroyuki Kinoshita1, Masanori Kawaguchi2, Hirofumi Yamazaki2, Yoshifumi Sakata1.
Abstract
Laparoscopic subtotal cholecystectomy, a bailout surgery for cholecystitis, can result in postoperative bile leakage, so surgical ingenuity is required. An 88-year-old woman had pain at the right hypochondrium. Abdominal computed tomography showed swelling of the gallbladder and thickness of the gallbladder wall, leading to diagnosis of mild acute cholecystitis. Percutaneous transhepatic gallbladder drainage was performed to alleviate cholecystitis because the patient was taking antiplatelet medicine. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy was then performed within 72 hours from the onset. The gallbladder was operatively found to be strongly fibrotic, so the procedure was switched to laparoscopic subtotal cystectomy, dissecting the gallbladder at the infundibulum-cystic duct level. The gallbladder stump was closed with barbed suture and omentopexy was added due to fragility. There was no significant postoperative bile leakage. Additional omentopexy to stump closure in laparoscopic subtotal cholecystectomy was thought to be useful in prevention of postoperative bile leakage.Entities:
Keywords: bile leakage; laparoscopic subtotal cholecystectomy; omentopexy
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34726321 PMCID: PMC9298370 DOI: 10.1111/ases.13007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian J Endosc Surg ISSN: 1758-5902
FIGURE 1Abdominal computed tomography shows remarkable swelling of the gallbladder, thickness of the gallbladder wall and exclusion of the common hepatic duct, although there was no evidence of malignant tumors
FIGURE 2(A) The gallbladder was dissected at the infundibulum‐cystic duct level. (B) The gallbladder stump was sutured continuously with 3/0 V‐Loc, without ligating the orifice of cystic duct and without performance of mucoclasis of the remnant gallbladder. (C) Vascularized omentum was mobilized and used to cover the stump by two stitches on the cranial and caudal side of the stump with 3/0 vicryl