Endoscopy 1994; 26(7): 609-612
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1009048
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Percutaneous Endoscopic Polypectomy of Gallbladder Polyps

Z.-L. Ji1 , H.-R. Chen1 , E.-H. Wang1 , D.-T. Yang1 , N.-R. Gao1 , J.-Z. Yang1 , B.-Y. Liu2
  • 1Departments of General and Biliary Surgery, Affiliated Hospital, Nanjing Railway Medical College, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China
  • 2Department of Surgery, Hospital of Pu Zheng Locomotive Plant, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China
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Publication History

Publication Date:
17 March 2008 (online)

Abstract

We report here our preliminary experience with percutaneous endoscopic polypectomy of gallbladder polyps. Five patients with a total of 17 cholesterol polyps (size: 4-6 mm) and one patient with two gallbladder adenomas (size: 5 mm), four of whom were symptomatic and all of whom refused cholecystectomy, underwent a single-stage procedure under epidural anesthesia. All patients had functioning gallbladders, as assessed by oral cholecystography after stimulation. Following a small incision, the gallbladder was pulled out of the abdominal wall, incised, and a cholecystoscope introduced. The polyps were coagulated at their stalk using microwave irradiation (70-80 mA, 9 sec) and removed for histopathological evaluation thereafter. A catheter was left in situ for ten days. Follow-up for a mean of 11.6 months (8-16 months) showed all patients to be symptom-free and without recurrence of polyps on ultrasonography. Gallbladder function was assessed in five cases by meal-stimulated oral cholecystography, and in one by hepato-iminodiacetate acid (HIDA) scan and was found to be well preserved. The preliminary results warrant further evaluation of this method of removing indeterminate gallbladder polyps.

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