Abstract

Multiple techniques are now available for management of the patient with retained or recurrent common bile duct calculi. The goal of treatment is extraction of calculi with the lowest possible incidence of morbidity and mortality, the lowest cost and least discomfort to the patient, and the best long-term results. The choice of therapy--surgical or nonsurgical--depends on several factors, including presence or absence of the gallbladder and a T tube, type of calculi, operative risk, accompanying conditions, and expertise available at a particular institution. The decision to explore the common bile duct at the time of elective cholecystectomy is based on clinical, operative, and cholangiographic information. A rigorous technique of surgical exploration that includes duodenal mobilization, choledochoscopy, and cholangiography is necessary. In selected patients, biliary enteric anastomosis decreases the incidence of retained or recurrent calculi.

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