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1525 laparoscopic cholecystectomies without biliary injury: a single institution's experience.
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1995
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LaparoscopyEus-guided Gallbladder DrainageHepatologyBiliary TractLaparoscopic CholecystectomySurgical PathologyGastroenterologyGallbladder DiseaseBiliary DisorderSurgeryGeneral SurgeryBiliary CancersCholangiopathiesMedicineLaparoscopic CholecystectomiesSelective Intraoperative CholangiographyRadiology
Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy (LC) has become the preferred treatment of gallbladder disease. The indications for LC remain unchanged from those for open cholecystectomy (OC). A total of 1525 patients underwent LC at Georgia Baptist Medical Center between December 1989 and December 1992. The procedure was completed in 1,492 patients (97.8%) and required conversion to OC in 33 patients (2.2%). Selective intraoperative cholangiography was used in 165 patients (10.8%). Overall morbidity was 4.06%, and there were four deaths not operatively related, for a 0.26% mortality rate. There have been no biliary ductal injuries. The average hospital stay was 0.82 days, with 37.4% of the patients going home as true outpatients and 44.5% going home on postop Day one. Most published series on LC report a small incidence of biliary injury. We feel that with meticulous dissection of the cystic duct and use of selective intraoperative cholangiography to define unsure anatomy, biliary injury can be minimized.