Of the 187 cases of infantile choledochal cyst treated at our hospitals, we encountered 13 with spontaneous perforation. All cases were under 4 years old. Eight cases were found to have biliary peritonitis and 5 had a sealed perforation. The shape of the extrahepatic bile duct was cystic in 8 and fusiform in 5. The cyst wall around the perforation was filmy and bile was found to be oozing through the thinned wall. Nine perforations were single while 4 cases had multiple perforations. Four of 17 perforations occurred in the posterior part of the cyst wall. Only 1 case of perforation was associated with protein plugs in a common channel, while 7 of the 10 cases of choledochal cyst requiring percutaneous biliary drainage due to signs of raised intrabiliary pressure were found to have protein plugs. We consider that spontaneous perforation of a choledochal cyst is not rare in infancy. The etiology of a perforation must be epithelial irritation of the biliary tract due to refluxed pancreatic juice caused by pancreatico-biliary malunion associated with mural immaturity due to infancy, rather than an abnormal rise in ductal pressure or congenital mural weakness at a certain point.
The authors encountered 108 cases of vesicoureteral reflex (VUR) in 231 cases of neurogenic bladder complicating spina bifida. Bladder compliance and percent volume (% vol.) were measured pre- and postoperatively and the patients were divided into four groups retrospectively according to the treatment. Ninety-five percent of low-grade VUR (grades I and II) disappeared spontaneously with conservative therapy or after augmentation cystoplasty without antireflux surgery; 92% of high-grade VUR (grade III or more) required ureteral reimplantation with or without bladder augmentation. Reflux did not recur in any case of ureteral reimplantation with bladder augmentation, however, it did recur in 20.4% of the cases of simple ureteral reimplantation without bladder augmentation. Percent volume and bladder compliance in cases of recurrence following simple ureteral reimplantation were significantly lower than in the successful cases. This study suggests that low-grade VUR can resolve spontaneously with conservative therapy or with a suitable maneuver to improve bladder compliance. High-grade reflux in cases of preserved bladder volume (% vol.>75%) and compliance (>7 ml/cmH2O) can be treated successfully with simple ureteral reimplantation, however, in cases of low volume (% vol.<60%) and low compliance (<4 ml/cmH2O), reimplantation with bladder augmentation is recommended.
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