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Obstructive Jaundice

Introduction

Obstructive Jaundice is a fairly common presentation to the emergency department and surgical teams. The most common cause is gallstones. You may also want to read about Gallstones and Jaundice for more information.

Aetiology of obstructive jaundice

Common

Infrequent

Rare

Investigation of obstructive jaundice

Investigation will differentiate hepatocellular and obstructive jaundice in 90% cases

Blood results

Urinalysis findings

Haemolysis Obstruction Hepatocellular
Conjugated bilirubin normal increased normal
Urobilinogen increased nil normal

 

Ultrasound

CT Scanning

Radionucloetide scanning

Endoscopic retrograde cholangiogram (ERCP)

Percutaneous transhepatic cholangiogram (PTC)

Complications of obstructive jaundice

Ascending cholangitis

Clotting disorders

Hepato-renal syndrome

Drug Metabolism

Impaired wound healing

Perioperative management of obstructive jaundice

Common bile duct stones

Accurate prediction of the presence of common bile duct stones can be difficult

ERCP and endoscopic sphincterotomy is investigation of choice

Stones extracted with balloons or Dormia basket

If fails to clear stones will require one of:

If retained stones after CBD exploration need to consider:

ERCP image showing impacted distal common bile duct stone. This file is taken from wikimedia commons and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

References

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