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[Comments on emergency treatment of biliary lithiasis in patients over 75 years of age. Apropos of 157 cases]
- Source :
- Europe PubMed Central
- Publication Year :
- 1997
-
Abstract
- Surgery remains the ideal emergency treatment for biliary lithiasis in elderly subjects despite perioperative morbidity and mortality. Minimally invasive techniques appear promising but require assessment. The aim of this work was to determine the usefulness of these techniques and evaluate outcome in a series of 157 patients over 75 years of age who were hospitalized in an emergency setting of complicated biliary lithiasis from January 1990 to December 1996. There were 103 women and 54 men, mean age 82 years. The patients' general status was evaluated according to the ASA classification; 66% of the patients were ASA III, IV or V. Diagnoses at admission were acute cholecystitis (n = 71, 45%), angiocholitis (n = 50, 31%) subintrant hepatic colic (n = 17, 10.8%), pancreatitis (n = 10, 6%), isolated jaundice (n = 2), peritonitis (n = 2) and occlusion (n = 5). Within 24 hours of admission, 7 patients underwent emergency surgery, and the 150 others were given medical treatment. Among these 150 patients, cure was considered to have been achieved with medical treatment alone in 41 (subsequent surgery being required in only one 6 months later), semi-emergency was performed in 17, and a minimally invasive procedure was performed in the 92 others (echo-guided percutaneous cholecystostomy in 42, endoscopic sphincterotomy in 50) followed by a subsequent operation in 29. In the 103 patients (65.5%) in this series who did not undergo surgery, mortality was 3.8% and in the 54 patients (34.5%) who did, mortality was 15%, but this rate was only 6.9% when the open procedure followed a minimally invasive technique. Surgical treatment of complicated biliary disease remains the ideal therapy but indications should be carefully weighed in these elderly fragilized subjects. Under surgical observation, abstention from surgery or use of minimally invasive techniques can play an important role in the therapeutic strategy aimed at lowering perioperative mortality.
Details
- Language :
- French
- ISSN :
- 00217697
- Volume :
- 134
- Issue :
- 9-10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal de chirurgie
- Accession number :
- edsair.pmid.dedup....344fbba5ae13ac43e14cdbf18555a28e