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Detection of Bile Leakage from Traumatic Right Hepatic Duct Laceration with Technetium-99m DISIDA Cholescintigraphy
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1987
Year
GastroenterologySurgeryBile LeaksBile LeakageCholangiopathiesInitial UltrasoundLarge Bile LeakHepatic DisordersBiliary DisorderRadiologyHealth SciencesEmergency RadiologyTechnetium-99m Disida CholescintigraphyMedical ImagingLiver PhysiologyAbdominal ImagingHistopathologyRadiologic ImagingEus-guided Gallbladder DrainageHepatologyBiliary TractMedicine
A woman was admitted to the hospital after blunt abdominal trauma. Initial ultrasound was equivocal but suggested a localized hepatic laceration. The patient was discharged but returned three weeks later with ascites and mild pain in the right upper abdominal quadrant. Hepatobiliary imaging identified a large bile leak originating from the porta hepatis but showed no evidence of parenchymal injury. No hepatic injury was found at surgery, but a laceration of the right hepatic duct was identified. Hepatobiliary imaging is the procedure of choice in diagnosing bile leaks from the extrahepatic biliary system.