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KMID : 0371320050690020176
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society
2005 Volume.69 No. 2 p.176 ~ p.180
Surgical Clips Found at the Hepatic Duct after Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy: a Possible Case of Clip Migration
ÀÌ°Ç¿µ/Lee KY
¾È½ÂÀÍ/±è¼¼Áß/Á¶ÀÀÈ£/ÃÖ¼±±Ù/ÇãÀ±¼®/Á¶¿µ¾÷/È«±âõ/½Å¼®È¯/±è°æ·¡/¿ìÁ¦È«/Á¤¼®/Ahn SI/Kim SJ/Cho EH/Choi SK/Hur YS/Cho YU/Hong KC/Shin SH/Kim KR/Woo ZH/Jeong S
Abstract
Surgical clip migration and subsequent stone formation in the common bile duct is a rare, but well-established complication after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. There are some suggestions about the mechanisms of the migration process, but the details are still unclear. We report here on a case in which common bile duct stones were formed around surgical clips, and other clips were found to have penetrated into the common hepatic duct, which we believe were in the process of migration after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The patient required a laparotomy to retrieve the bile duct stones due to the distal bile duct stricture, and another laparotomy was necessary to remove the penetrating clips, which were deeply embedded in the bile duct wall. Although a variety of endoscopic and percutaneous interventional procedures are available in this era of modern medical technology, it is sometimes impractical to apply these procedures in such cases as ours, and exploratory laparotomy is sometimes required to correctly treat the patient. This case shows that the metallic surgical clips can penetrate into the intact bile duct wall through serial maceration, and we believe that careful application of clips may be the only way to prevent their migration after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. (J Korean Surg Soc 2005;69:176-180)
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