Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0016382 (
flushing
)
6,387
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The binomial PTBD-cholangitis often stands under different and sometimes even opposite relations. Among its indications the procedure lists, the treatment of cholangitis which, on the other hand, may be itself a complication of biliary drainage. The present work proposes a critical review of cholangitis-PTBD correlations, from an ordinary clinical-radiological point of view. Different pathogenetic hypothesis of cholangitis (inflammation,
cholestasis
, surgical manipulation) are discussed together with risk factors (impaired macrophagic-phagocytic system, immunosuppression, wide neoplastic liver involvement, multiple intrahepatic ductal obstructions, chronic liver diseases, aged patients, etc.). The authors also report about prevention and treatment of septic complications which must be carried out following technical and therapeutic strategies, such as chemoprophylaxis and focused antibiotic therapy according to bile culture samples, slow injection of small amounts of contrast medium, peripheral branches approach, gentle handling of catheters and guidewires,
flushing
with saline solutions and brushing of the catheter itself, and finally use of large gauge catheters in the presence of bile sludge.
...
PMID:[Cholangitis and percutaneous biliary drainage]. 265 84
A 68-yr-old woman who had had a cholecystectomy and endoscopic sphincterotomy developed recurrent common
bile duct obstruction
. She had another ERCP with extension of the site of endoscopic sphincterotomy, and 3 days later biliary obstruction again developed, this time from a blood clot filling the common bile duct. The clot was removed by Fogarty technique, and the duct was irrigated with heparin; the obstruction resolved. Minor hemobilia (biliary tract hemorrhage without overt GI bleeding) may be confused with choledocholithiasis. When biliary obstruction follows endoscopic sphincterotomy, attempts at
flushing
the duct should precede empiric maneuvers for stone removal.
...
PMID:Bleeding causing biliary obstruction after endoscopic sphincterotomy. 912 34
Biliary strictures (BS), a major complication after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT), cause morbidity, mortality, graft loss, and increased costs. The virtually unchanged incidence of BS (approximately 10%-25%) suggests that they are not simply "technical" in origin, but probably represent a mucosa ischemic injury inherent in the transplantation procedure. To study risk factors for BS, we analyzed 403 OLTs performed between January 1, 1997 and December 31, 2006, at a single center, excluding cases of regraft or death within 1 month. The average time to the diagnosis of the BS was 253 days (range, 7-1002 days). Upon univariate analysis, the absence of
flushing
of donor bile ducts, an imported versus a locally procured liver, and rejection were risk factors for BS. In contrast, the following factors were protective: donor cardiac arrest followed by resuscitation (suggesting an ischemic preconditioning effect) as well as addition of epoprostenol to and pressurization of the preservation solution. Patients with higher postoperative peak values of transaminases, bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, and gamma glutamyl transpeptidase were at greater risk for later development of BS. Donor hypotension, donor age, donor intensive care unit (ICU) stay, type of preservation, positive cross-match, cold and warm ischemia times, sequential versus simultaneous portal/arterial reperfusion, as well as cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection were not risk factors for BS. Upon multivariate analysis, only epoprostenol and pressurization offered protection from BS. In conclusion, this study 2 novel points: (1) patients with high(er) transaminase values and
cholestasis
early postoperatively are at greater risk to develop later BS and require close monitoring and (2) donor maneuvers for better
flushing
and preserving peribiliary vascular plexus and biliary mucosa (epoprostenol and pressurization of preservation solution) offer protection from BS.
...
PMID:Biliary strictures after liver transplantation: risk factors and prevention by donor treatment with epoprostenol. 1985 57
We describe a 99-day old girl with inspissated bile syndrome (IBS) unresponsive to treatment with oral ursodeoxycholic acid. We performed a pure laparoscopic 2-stage procedure, consisting of cholecystostomy and insertion of an indwelling balloon catheter for local ursodeoxycholic acid
flushing
for 13 consecutive days. Subsequently, the cholecystostomy was removed, preserving the gallbladder using the same laparoscopical approach when bilirubin values returned to normal and
bile duct obstruction
was no longer detectable radiologically. This is the first report of an exclusively laparoscopic management of IBS.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of inspissated bile syndrome using a 2-stage pure laparoscopic approach: a case report. 2321 17