ü¿Ü Ãæ°ÝÆÄ ¼â¼®¼úÀ» ÀÌ¿ëÇÏ¿© Á¦°ÅÇÑ °Å´ë´ãµµÀ§¼® 1¿¹
A Case of a Huge Biliary Bezoar Treated with ESWL
´ëÇÑÃé´ãµµÇÐȸÁö 2014³â 19±Ç 1È£ p.37 ~ p.41
±ÇÇõÂù(Kwon Hyeok-Chan) - ´Ü±¹´ëÇб³ Àǰú´ëÇÐ ³»°úÇб³½Ç
±èÈ«ÀÚ(Kim Hong-Ja) - ´Ü±¹´ëÇб³ Àǰú´ëÇÐ ³»°úÇб³½Ç
Àå¿ëÈ£(Jang Yong-Ho) - ´Ü±¹´ëÇб³ Àǰú´ëÇÐ ³»°úÇб³½Ç
ÀüÁöÇö(Jeon Ji-Hyun) - ´Ü±¹´ëÇб³ Àǰú´ëÇÐ ³»°úÇб³½Ç
±è¿äÇÑ(Kim Yo-Han) - ´Ü±¹´ëÇб³ Àǰú´ëÇÐ ³»°úÇб³½Ç
¼¿ø¿ë(Suh Won-Yong) - ´Ü±¹´ëÇб³ Àǰú´ëÇÐ ³»°úÇб³½Ç
Àå¼®ºó(Jang Suk-Bin) - ´Ü±¹´ëÇб³ Àǰú´ëÇÐ ³»°úÇб³½Ç
Abstract
A bezoar is a mass formed by the accumulation of digested food. A biliary bezoar, namely a bezoar formed in the bile duct, is rare, which occurs mostly in patients who formerly underwent cholecystectomy. It appears that incompetent sphincter produces occasional reverse flow of foreign bodies including undigested food from the alimentary canal into the bile tract. Surgical treatment is used for huge biliary bezoar which is too huge to be removed by nonsurgical treatment. Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) is mostly used to fragment renal or urinary calculi, but may be sparingly used against biliary calculi. This is to report the rare case of a patient with biliary bezoar who formerly underwent open cholecystectomy and choledocoduodenostomy. The patient¡¯s huge biliary bezoar was removed by ESWL and the successive execution of endoscopic retrograde cholangio pancreatography (ERCP). ESWL is expected to be a comparatively safe and convenient solution to huge biliary bezoars.
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À§¼®, ´ãµµ, ü¿Ü Ãæ°ÝÆÄ ¼â¼®¼ú
Bezoar, Bile duct, Extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy
KMID :
0985520140190010037
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