scholarly journals Incomplete Annular Pancreas with Ectopic Opening of the Pancreatic and Bile Ducts into the Pyloric Ring: First Report of a Rare Anomaly

2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 373-380 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shinjiro Kobayashi ◽  
Horoyuki Hoshino ◽  
Kouhei Segami ◽  
Satoshi Koizumi ◽  
Nobuyuki Ooike ◽  
...  

The patient was a 56-year-old woman who had experienced epigastralgia and dorsal pain several times over the last 20 years. She was admitted for a diagnosis of acute cholecystitis, and severe intra- and extrahepatic bile duct dilatation with inner air density was noted. No papilla of Vater was present in the descending duodenum, and 2 small holes were present in the pyloric ring. Bile excretion from one of the small holes was observed under forward-viewing endoscope. It was considered that the pancreatic and bile ducts separately opened into the pyloric ring. Based on these findings, malformation of the pancreaticobiliary duct was diagnosed. She did not wish treatment, but the obstruction associated with duodenal stenosis was noted after 2 years. Pancreatoduodenectomy was performed as curative treatment for duodenal stenosis and retrograde biliary infection through the bile duct opening in the pyloric ring. The ventral pancreas encompassed almost the entire circumference of the pyloric ring, suggesting a subtype of annular pancreas. Generally, lesions are present in the descending part of the duodenum in an annular pancreas, and the pancreatic and bile ducts join in the papillary region. However, in this patient, (1) the pancreas encompassed the pyloric ring, (2) the pancreatic and bile ducts opened separately, and (3) the openings of the pancreatic and bile ducts were present in the pyloric ring. The pancreas and biliary tract develop through a complex process, which may cause various types of malformation of the pancreaticobiliary system, but no similar case report was found on a literature search. This case was very rare and could not be classified in any type of congenital anomaly of the pancreas. We would classify it as a subtype of annular pancreas with separate ectopic opening of the pancreatic and bile ducts into the pyloric ring.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Atallah AL-Oudat ◽  
Mohammad AL Oudat ◽  
Hazem Migdady ◽  
Tariq AL Munaizel ◽  
Mohammad Awni Mahmoud ◽  
...  

Abstract A set of tubes known as bile ducts connects the liver to an organ below it directly that is called Gallbladder. The dilation of a bile duct is an important indicator regarding any serious issue in the human body. Number of reasons may cause bile duct dilation, such as: stones, tumors which commonly occur due to pancreas or papilla of vater. In this paper, the main contributions are: 1) a novel framework that consists of three phases to be applied on a set of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) images 2) an extracted set of features with their accurate values that express the condition of the biliary trees from the MRI images. Such dataset can be used in several applications to determine whether a bile duct is dilated or not. The dataset is organized as the following: half of the MRI images are for normal bile ducts, while the other half is for dilated bile ducts. To extract the useful features to diagnose the medical condition of the bile ducts from the MRI images, we implemented and applied the proposed framework that is started by using the enhanced active contour technique without edges in combination with Denoising Convolutional Neural Networks (DnCNN) to perform the segmentation and features extraction process. After that, the output of the segmentation process is the segmented biliary tree that will be used later to extract the needful features to make a diagnostic decision whether there is a dilation or not by comparing the features values of the normal versus the dilated bile ducts. We applied the feed forward neural network with backpropagation training algorithm for classification purposes. According to the experiments, the overall accuracy of the proposed framework was 90.00%. Such approach improves and increases the accuracy of the physicians’ diagnostic decisions which is considered as of significant importance for treatment and cure.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 20-24
Author(s):  
Aldona Wybraniec-Zaręba ◽  
Julia Tuchalska-Czuroń ◽  
Gabriela Półtorak-Szymczak ◽  
Mariusz Furmanek ◽  
Jerzy Walecki ◽  
...  

Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is a chronic liver disease in which there are inflammation and scarring of the bile ducts leading to fibrosis, destruction and narrowing of the bile ducts, resulting in cholestasis. In the long run, PSC can cause liver cirrhosis and failure. In clinical practice, the diagnosis of PSC is generally based on blood tests and imaging studies (currently preferably magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography). To make a diagnosis of PSC it is necessary to exclude secondary causes of sclerosing cholangitis. The most common MRI features of PSC concerning bile ducts are: bile duct dilatation, beading, extrahepatic bile duct stenosis, wall enhancement and thickening. The most common MRI features of PSC concerning hepatic parenchyma are: rounded shape of the liver caused by hypertrophy of caudate lobe and left liver lobe, atrophy of the right lobe, enlargement of portal and/or portacaval lymph nodes, peripheral parenchymal inflammation, wedge-shaped confluent fibrosis, heterogeneity of the liver parenchyma, periportal oedema, cirrhosis with indirect signs of portal hypertension such as splenomegaly, ascites and collateral vasculature.


Author(s):  
M. A. Shorikov ◽  
O. N. Sergeeva ◽  
M. G. Lapteva ◽  
N. A. Peregudov ◽  
B. I. Dolgushin

Proximal extrahepatic bile ducts are the biliary tree segment within formal boundaries from cystic ductcommon hepatic duct junction to sectoral hepatic ducts. Despite being a focus of attention of diagnostic and interventional radiologists, endoscopists, hepatobiliary surgeons and transplantologists they weren’t comprehensively described in available papers. The majority of the authors regard bile duct confluence as a group of merging primitively arranged tubes providing bile flow. The information on the proximal extrahepatic bile duct embryonal development, variant anatomy, innervation, arterial, venous and lymphatic supply is too general and not detailed. The present review brought together and systemized exiting to the date data on anatomy and function of this biliary tract portion. Unique, different from the majority of hollow organs organization of the proximal extrahepatic bile duct adapts them to the flow of the bile, i.e. viscous aggressive due to pH about 8.0 and detergents fluid, under higher wall pressure than in other parts of biliary tree. 


2015 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 284-287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Negin Karimian ◽  
Pepijn D. Weeder ◽  
Fernanda Bomfati ◽  
Annette S.H. Gouw ◽  
Robert J. Porte

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Llewellyn ◽  
Emilia Roberts ◽  
Chengyang Liu ◽  
Ali Naji ◽  
Richard K. Assoian ◽  
...  

AbstractEGF-Containing Fibulin Extracellular Matrix Protein 1 (EFEMP1, also called fibulin 3) is an extracellular matrix protein linked in a genome-wide association study to biliary atresia, a fibro-inflammatory disease of the neonatal extrahepatic bile duct. EFEMP1 is expressed in most tissues and Efemp1 null mice have decreased elastic fibers in visceral fascia; however, in contrast to other short fibulins (fibulins 4 and 5), EFEMP1 does not have a role in the development of large elastic fibers, and its overall function remains unclear. We demonstrated that EFEMP1 is expressed in the submucosa of both neonatal and adult mouse and human extrahepatic bile ducts and that, in adult Efemp1+/- mice, elastin organization into fibers is decreased. We used pressure myography, a technique developed to study the mechanics of the vasculature, to show that Efemp1+/- extrahepatic bile ducts are more compliant to luminal pressure, leading to increased circumferential stretch. We conclude that EFEMP1 has an important role in the formation of elastic fibers and mechanical properties of the extrahepatic bile duct. These data suggest that altered expression of EFEMP1 in the extrahepatic bile duct leads to an abnormal response to mechanical stress such as obstruction, potentially explaining the role of EFEMP1 in biliary atresia.


2021 ◽  
Vol 59 (09) ◽  
pp. 933-943
Author(s):  
Frank Füldner ◽  
Frank Meyer ◽  
Uwe Will

Abstract Background and study aim Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is the gold standard for the treatment of biliary obstruction of any etiology. However, cannulation failure of the common bile duct (CBD) by ERCP occurs in 5–10%. Alternatives after a failed ERCP are re-ERCP by an expert endoscopist, percutaneous transhepatic cholangio drainage (PTCD), (balloon) enteroscopy-assisted ERCP, or surgery. Endoscopic ultrasonography-guided drainage of the bile ducts (EUS-BD) is becoming the standard of care in tertiary referral centers for cases of failed ERCP in patients with malignant obstruction of the CBD. In expert hands, EUS-guided biliary drainage has excellent technical/clinical success rates and lower complication rates compared to PTCD. Despite the successful performance of EUS-BD in malignant cases, its use in benign cases is limited. The aim of this study (design, systematic prospective clinical observational study on quality assurance in daily clinical practice) was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of EUS-BD in benign indications. Patients and methods Patients with cholestasis and failed ERCP were recruited from a prospective EUS-BD registry (2004–2020). One hundred and three patients with EUS-BD and benign cholestasis were extracted from the registry (nTotal = 474). Indications of EUS-BDs included surgically altered anatomy (n = 65), atypical bile duct percutaneous transhepatic cholangio orifice at the duodenal junction from the longitudinal to the horizontal segment (n = 1), papilla of Vater not reached due to the gastric outlet/duodenal stenoses (n = 6), papilla that cannot be catheterized (n = 24), and proximal bile duct stenosis (n = 7). The primary endpoint was technical and clinical success. Secondary endpoints were procedure-related complications during the hospital stay. Results 103 patients with EUS-BD and benign cholestasis were extracted from the registry (nTotal=474). Different transluminal access routes were used to reach the bile ducts: transgastric (n = 72/103); -duodenal (n = 16/103); -jejunal (n = 14/103); combined -duodenal and -gastric (n = 1/103). The technical success rate was 96 % (n = 99) for cholangiography. Drainage was not required in 2 patients; balloon dilatation including stone extraction was sufficient in 17 cases (16.5 %; no additional or prophylactic insertion of a drain). Transluminal drainage was achieved in n = 68/103 (66 %; even higher in patients with drain indication only) by placement of a plastic stent (n = 29), conventional biliary metal stents (n = 24), HotAXIOS stents (n = 5; Boston Scientific, Ratingen, Germany), Hanaro stents (n = 6; Olympus, Hamburg, Germany), HotAXIOS stents and plastic stents (n = 1), HotAXIOS stents and metal stents (n = 1) and metal stents and plastic stents (n = 2). Techniques for stone extraction alone (nSuccessful=17) or stent insertion (nTotal = 85; nSuccessful=85 – rate, 100 %) and final EUS-BD access pathway included: Rendezvous technique (n = 14/85; 16.5 %), antegrade internal drainage (n = 20/85; 23.5 %), choledochointestinostomy (n = 7/85; 8.2 %), antegrade internal and hepaticointestinostomy (n = 22/85; 25.9 %), hepaticointestinostomy (n = 21/85; 24.7 %), choledochointestinostomy and hepaticointestinostomy (n = 1/85; 1.2 %).The complication rate was 25 % (n = 26) – the spectrum comprised stent dislocation (n = 11), perforation (n = 1), pain (n = 2), hemorrhage (n = 6), biliary ascites/leakage (n = 3) and bilioma/liver abscess (n = 3; major complication rate, n = 12/68 – 17.6 %). Re-interventions were required in 19 patients (24 interventions in total). Discussion EUS-BD can be considered an elegant and safe alternative to PTCD or reoperation for failed ERCP to achieve the necessary drainage of the biliary system even in underlying benign diseases. An interventional EUS-based internal procedure can resolve cholestasis, avoid PTCD or reoperation, and thus improve quality of life. Due to the often complex (pathological and/or postoperative) anatomy, EUS-BD should only be performed in centers with interventional endoscopy/EUS experience including adequate abdominal surgery and interventional radiology expertise in the background. This enables adequately adapted therapeutic management in the event of challenging complications. It seems appropriate to conduct further studies with larger numbers of cases to systematize the approach and peri-interventional management and to successively develop specific equipment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (6) ◽  
pp. 30-36
Author(s):  
A. G. Shuleshov ◽  
N. V. Fomicheva ◽  
D. N. Ulyanov ◽  
A. S. Balalykin ◽  
D. V. Danilov ◽  
...  

An analysis of the diagnosis of extrahepatic bile duct diseases in 115 patients is presented. With the diagnostic purpose they performed ERCP, EPT, cholangioscopy. The method of direct visualization of the mucous membrane of the bile ducts allows you to identify endoscopic signs of strictures. Differential diagnosis of benign and malignant strictures of the bile ducts using cholangioscopy is difficult. Nevertheless, we were able to identify some typical signs for malignant strictures, including ulceration and mucosal infiltration, vascular pattern irregularity, stricture asymmetry.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 3099
Author(s):  
Yolik Ramírez-Marín ◽  
David Eduardo Abad-Contreras ◽  
Martha Ustarroz-Cano ◽  
Norma S. Pérez-Gallardo ◽  
Lorena Villafuerte-García ◽  
...  

Reconstruction of bile ducts damaged remains a vexing medical problem. Surgeons have few options when it comes to a long segment reconstruction of the bile duct. Biological scaffolds of decellularized biliary origin may offer an approach to support the replace of bile ducts. Our objective was to obtain an extracellular matrix scaffold derived from porcine extrahepatic bile ducts (dECM-BD) and to analyze its biological and biochemical properties. The efficiency of the tailored perfusion decellularization process was assessed through histology stainings. Results from 4’-6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) stainings, and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) quantification showed proper extracellular matrix (ECM) decellularization with an effectiveness of 98%. Immunohistochemistry results indicate an effective decrease in immunogenic marker as human leukocyte antigens (HLA-A) and Cytokeratin 7 (CK7) proteins. The ECM of the bile duct was preserved according to Masson and Herovici stainings. Data derived from scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) showed the preservation of the dECM-BD hierarchical structures. Cytotoxicity of dECM-BD was null, with cells able to infiltrate the scaffold. In this work, we standardized a decellularization method that allows one to obtain a natural bile duct scaffold with hierarchical ultrastructure preservation and adequate cytocompatibility.


2001 ◽  
Vol 7 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 159-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hirokazu Inoue

The characteristics of sites of intramural cancer spread were examined by comparing the intraductal ultrasonography (IDUS) and wall thickening findings at sites of intramural cancer spread and non-spread, in patients with malignant bile duct stenosis who had undergone percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD).The subjects were ten patients with extrahepatic bile duct cancer, two with pancreatic cancer, one with cancer of the gallbladder, and one with cancer of the papilla of Vater who underwent preoperative IDUS. From these patients, 50 IDUS slices were examined with a congruent relationship with the histologic section of resected tissue. The maximum thickening, minimum thickening, maximum/minimum thickening ratio, and form factor of the medial and lateral margins of the medial hypoechoic layer were determined using diagnostic imaging, and the results were compared at sites of cancer spread and non-spread.Twelve slices were obtained from the site of stenosis, 14 from sites of cancer spread, and 24 from non-spread sites. The maximum thickening, minimum thickening, and maximum/minimum thickening ratio differed significantly between the sites of spread and the non-spread.The absolute values for wall thickening are useful for diagnosing the presence of intramural spread in patients with malignant biliary duct stenosis.


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