Abstract

Abstract: Acute obstructive suppurative cholangitis is a life‐threatening condition and prompt biliary decompression is essential if the patient is to survive. One hundred patients with acute obstructive (suppurative) cholangitis were treated by simple endoscopic cannulation for biliary drainage. Forty‐eight patients had common duct stones alone, 33 patients had additional stones in the gallbladder, and 18 patients had stones in the intrahepatic ducts. Another patient had a confluence stone. Twenty‐six patients had undergone endoscopic sphincterotomy. Bile duct dilatation was present in only 25 of 47 patients (53%) studied by ultrasound tomography. Biliary decompression was achieved in 98 patients. One tortuous distal bile duct and one oversized stone were the causes of failure in two patients. Forty‐seven patients proved to have suppurative cholangitis. Most patients felt instant and dramatic relief of their syniptoms. Bleeding at sphinctetomy was the only complication associated with the decompression ocurring in 2 patients. Bending (2 patients) and withdrawal (2 patients) of a nasobiliary catheter, and nasal bleeding (1 patient) were the complications related to nasobiliary drainage. Two patients with suppurative cholangitis died despite successful decompression performed 3 and 5 days after the onset of cholangitis. This delay seemed responsible for their deaths. Thus the mortality rate was 2.0% for all the patients arid 4.3% for those with suppurative cholangitis. These results suggest that endoscopic cannulation, which is feasible even in the absence of bile duct dilatation, is a prompt, safe, and effective procedure for emergency biliary decompression for the treatment of acute obstructive (suppurative) cholangitis.

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