Abstract

Bile duct lesions with leakage and stenosis can occur after open or laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Multiple factors are involved either related to the patient or external due to technical equipment or surgeon. Bismuth classification is generally accepted. The aim is to restore the bile duct and to prevent short-term and long-term complications such as biliary fistula, intra-abdominal abscess, biliary stricture, recurrent cholangitis, and secondary biliary cirrhosis. Endoscopic therapy with biliary sphincterotomy alone or with the additional placement of a biliary/nasobiliary stent drainage is recommended. Stenting should be avoided if complete strictures exist or a circumferential resection of the duct. Endotherapy can be considered a sensible option and should be the main-stay treatment in these patients but one must keep in mind it is costly and is usually practiced by experienced teams in tertiary centers. The purpose of our paper is to exemplify this complication which is inherently rare, to highlight the diagnostic and treatment tools with minimal long-term sequelae.

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