Abstract

Interventional procedure via percutaneous transhepatic route is often performed, as an initial treatment, in patients with benign bilioenteric anastomotic stricture. However, surgical management is required in most cases in which radiological intervention is unsuccessful. In this report, we describe a case of a 67-year-old woman with recurrent bilioenteric anastomotic stricture, accompanying bilateral hepatolitiasis after several times of transhepatic interventions. The patient underwent intrahepatic cholangiojejunostomy (Longmire procedure) and cholangioscopic lithotomy after resection of an atrophic left lateral segment resulting from hepatolithiasis. Although the damaged hilar bile duct had to be isolated and divided from the corresponding vasculature for re-anastomosis, it was quite impossible due to severe inflammatory change at the hepatic hilus. We, therefore, anastomosed the intact biliary stump on the cut surface of the left lateral segment to the jejunal loop with a stent tube. The patient's postoperative course was uneventful and she exhibited no evidence of cholangitis during follow-up period of 1 year after surgery. At present, the indications for intrahepatic cholangiojejunostomy for biliary obstruction, are quite limited, but biliary surgeons should keep this procedure in mind at the time of biliary reconstruction for benign proximal bile duct stricture, particularly in cases of multiply operated hilum.

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