Displaying all 15 publications

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  1. Murugiah M, Sakijan AS
    Med J Malaysia, 1991 Sep;46(3):290-3.
    PMID: 1839928
    This is a case report of ascaris worm in the common bile duct in a 61 year old lady. Ultrasound diagnosis was initially made based on the presence of linear hyperreflective foci within the common bile duct. ERCP confirmed a single worm within the duct. Balloon extraction was then successfully carried out following papillotomy. This case illustrates the value of ultrasound in the definitive diagnosis of biliary ascariasis and the therapeutic role of ERCP.
    Matched MeSH terms: Common Bile Duct Diseases/diagnosis*; Common Bile Duct Diseases/parasitology; Common Bile Duct Diseases/therapy; Common Bile Duct Diseases/ultrasonography
  2. Ponnudurai R, George A, Sachithanandan S, Abdullah A, Ganesaligam K, Sanker L, et al.
    Endoscopy, 2006 Feb;38(2):199.
    PMID: 16479434
    Matched MeSH terms: Bile Duct Diseases/radiography; Bile Duct Diseases/surgery*; Bile Duct Diseases/ultrasonography
  3. Noda A
    Trop Gastroenterol, 1991 Jan-Mar;12(1):3-14.
    PMID: 2058008
    It has been known that intrahepatic biliary lithiasis (IHBL) is prevalent in East Asia including Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Singapore. In contrast, the entity has drawn little attention in Europe and the United States where only scattered reports appear. IHBL can be placed in the category of the benign disease. Its distinctive clinical picture is an intractable course necessitating multiple surgical interventions because recurrence is usual, rather than exceptional. This is in distinct contrast to ordinal stones which originate in the gallbladder. Patients with IHBL do not rarely die of progressive hepatic damage resulting from longstanding obstructive jaundice, cholangitis, liver abscess, septicemia, and so forth.
    Matched MeSH terms: Bile Duct Diseases/epidemiology; Bile Duct Diseases/radiography; Bile Duct Diseases/surgery
  4. Strong RW
    Med J Malaysia, 2005 Jul;60 Suppl B:141-3.
    PMID: 16108198
    Matched MeSH terms: Bile Duct Diseases/etiology*
  5. Krishnan MMS, Couper NTA
    Med J Malaysia, 1984 Jun;39(2):163-6.
    PMID: 6392840
    Matched MeSH terms: Common Bile Duct Diseases/diagnosis*
  6. Ponnudurai R, Sachithanandan S, George A
    J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci, 2011 May;18(3):311-8.
    PMID: 21468788 DOI: 10.1007/s00534-010-0354-5
    Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided injection therapy is the new frontier in the management of patients with hepatobiliary disease. Celiac plexus block/neurolysis was the first form of injection therapy and has been validated in many subsequent trials. Cyst ablation therapy, fiducial insertion, angiography, portal hypertensive therapy, endoscopic portosystemic shunt creation, portal vein embolization and injection of chemotherapeutic/biologic agents for antitumor therapy are more recent uses and will be discussed. Celiac plexus neurolysis is currently well established in providing adjunct pain control in patients with advanced malignancy. There are limited data available for its use in benign conditions. EUS-guided ablative therapy for pancreatic cysts remains an area for future research but seems to have a role for small thin-walled non-septated cysts. EUS-guided implantation of fiducials is technically feasible but its exact impact on tumor regression is unknown. Several case reports have documented EUS-guided alcohol and thrombin injection into pseudoaneurysms and cyanoacrylate and coil embolization for variceal therapy. Injection of viral vectors and immunomodulating cell cultures as antitumor therapy has been described but the evidence is still preliminary and further data are awaited.
    Matched MeSH terms: Bile Duct Diseases/drug therapy*; Bile Duct Diseases/ultrasonography
  7. Logeswaran R
    Comput Methods Programs Biomed, 2012 Sep;107(3):404-12.
    PMID: 21194781 DOI: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2010.12.002
    This paper reports on work undertaken to improve automated detection of bile ducts in magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) images, with the objective of conducting preliminary classification of the images for diagnosis. The proposed I-BDeDIMA (Improved Biliary Detection and Diagnosis through Intelligent Machine Analysis) scheme is a multi-stage framework consisting of successive phases of image normalization, denoising, structure identification, object labeling, feature selection and disease classification. A combination of multiresolution wavelet, dynamic intensity thresholding, segment-based region growing, region elimination, statistical analysis and neural networks, is used in this framework to achieve good structure detection and preliminary diagnosis. Tests conducted on over 200 clinical images with known diagnosis have shown promising results of over 90% accuracy. The scheme outperforms related work in the literature, making it a viable framework for computer-aided diagnosis of biliary diseases.
    Matched MeSH terms: Bile Duct Diseases/diagnosis; Bile Duct Diseases/therapy
  8. Khan TF, Zahari A, Sherazi ZA, Visvanathan R
    Singapore Med J, 1993 Oct;34(5):462-3.
    PMID: 8153702
    This is a report of a 57-year-old Malay lady who presented with recurrent episodes of cholangitis and septicaemia. A dilated biliary tree caused by a stenosing periampullary tumour was found to contain adult round worms. A pancreatico-duodenectomy was performed following biliary decompression. Ascarid worms are a rare cause of cholangitis in malignant biliary obstruction.
    Matched MeSH terms: Common Bile Duct Diseases/etiology; Common Bile Duct Diseases/parasitology*
  9. Jarmin R, Alwi RI, Shaharuddin S, Salleh KM, Gunn A
    Asian J Surg, 2004 Oct;27(4):342-4.
    PMID: 15564193
    A young man with HIV presented with biliary peritonitis secondary to spontaneous common bile duct perforation. Investigation revealed that the perforation was due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Tuberculosis of the bile duct is uncommon and usually presents with obstructive jaundice due to stricture. Bile duct perforation due to tuberculosis is extremely rare. Its management is discussed.
    Matched MeSH terms: Common Bile Duct Diseases/etiology*
  10. Din J, Qureshi A, Daud A, Ahmad H
    Med J Malaysia, 2000 Dec;55(4):473-7.
    PMID: 11221160
    Intrahepatic stones remain a major source of morbidity and mortality. With improving techniques in hepatobiliary surgery, the management and the outcome of intrahepatic calculi is reviewed. Forty-nine cases referred from all over Malaysia between January 1993 to June 1996 were analyzed retrospectively. There were thirty-two females and seventeen males. The median age was 46 years. Biliary diseases encountered in association with intrahepatic calculi included benign strictures (n = 14), ascariasis (n = 3), cholangiocarcinoma (n = 1), Caroli's disease (n = 1), and thalassaemia, (n = 1), fifty-six percent of stones were located in both the intrahepatic ducts while 34% were found in the left intrahepatic duct. Thirty-one patients underwent common bile duct exploration either alone or in combination with liver resection or bilioenteric anastomosis. Despite the various combinations of surgical and non-surgical intervention 28 (57.1%) patients had residual stones. Despite the availability of newer techniques in hepatobiliary surgery, residual stones were common, resulting in higher treatment costs.
    Matched MeSH terms: Bile Duct Diseases/complications
  11. Shuaib IL, Hayat FZ
    Med J Malaysia, 1995 Sep;50(3):284.
    PMID: 8926912
    Matched MeSH terms: Bile Duct Diseases/drug therapy*
  12. Yeoh NT, Somasundaram K, Alhady SF, Paramsothy M
    Med J Malaysia, 1986 Dec;41(4):365-9.
    PMID: 2823084
    Carcinoma of the biliary tract is a rare complication of choledochal cysts. Furthermore, the greater predisposition of the cyst wall to neoplastic change has been cited as additional justification for cyst excision rather than on-site internal drainage as the primary choice of operation. The report concerns a patient who developed cholangiocarcinoma despite excision of a choledochal cyst and presented with symptoms of biliary obstruction within one year of the operation. Although this is a rare complication, the need for careful long-term follow-up is supported by this observation.
    Matched MeSH terms: Common Bile Duct Diseases/complications*
  13. Lim KG, Sellaiah SP
    Singapore Med J, 1994 Aug;35(4):400-2.
    PMID: 7899902
    We report two cases of rural Malay women in Perak, Malaysia, with extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma and coexistent biliary ascariasis. In both cases, the narrowed bile duct may have resulted in inability of the migratory nematode to return to the gastrointestinal tract. It may be reasonable, also, to postulate that chronic biliary tract infestation by Ascaris lumbricoides may have contributed to the development of cholangiocarcinoma; a situation similar to that observed in liver fluke infestation.
    Matched MeSH terms: Common Bile Duct Diseases/parasitology*
  14. Toufeeq Khan TF, Lwin M, Ulah S, Zahari A, Mokti I
    Singapore Med J, 1993 Dec;34(6):545-50.
    PMID: 8153721
    Twenty bilio-enteric anastomoses were performed or managed from May 1990 to December 1992. Recurrent pyogenic cholangitis (RPC) and pancreatic cancer were the commonest conditions which required drainage procedures. Roux-en-Y hepatico-jejunostomy (RHJ) was performed in 9 patients, 4 for RPC, one for pancreatic cancer, another for a cholangiocarcinoma, 2 following excision of choledochal cyst and one hepatico-jejunostomy was part of a Whipple reconstruction. Roux-en-Y side to side choledocho-jejunostomy (CDJ) was performed in one patient. Choledocho-duodenostomy (CDD) was performed in 6, 4 for obstructive jaundice due to choledocholithiasis, one for RPC and one in a choledochal cyst. One patient operated elsewhere presented with complications after a CDD. Palliative cholecysto-jejunostomy (CYJ) was carried out in 4 patients with pancreatic malignancy. All benign conditions were treated by hepatico-jejunostomy and choledocho-duodenostomy, while three patients with malignant conditions were treated by hepatico-jejunostomy. Permanent subcutaneous access loops were provided when recurrent problems were anticipated, 4 in RPC and one after subtotal resection of a cholangiocarcinoma. Based on this study, we found Roux-en-Y hepatico-jejunostomy a versatile drainage procedure, which was useful in both benign and malignant diseases.
    Matched MeSH terms: Common Bile Duct Diseases/surgery*
  15. Sai Sanjeev M., Lum, L.C.
    Medicine & Health, 2012;7(2):102-106.
    MyJurnal
    Ascariasis is a common helminthic infestation in Malaysia, particularly in rural settings. Ascariasis lumbricoides normally lives in the upper small bowel without causing symptoms. Complications arise when these worms migrate into the bile duct (biliary ascariasis). A case of biliary ascariasis presenting as biliary colic is described. Patient presented with 2 days duration of right upper quandrant pain at the district hospital. Initial investigations were suggestive of acute cholecystitis and patient was treated with empirical antibiotics. However, due to worsening symptoms, she was transferred to the nearest tertiary setting. The diagnosis of helminthic biliary infestation was established using both ultrasound of the hepato-biliary system (HBS), CT-Scan abdomen and endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography (ERCP). Endoscopic removal of the worm led to rapid resolution of symptoms and patient was discharged home well.
    Matched MeSH terms: Bile Duct Diseases
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