An 8 year experience of 602 patients (median age 76 years) referred for endoscopic management of common bile stones is reported. No patient referred for treatment has been excluded. A diagnostic cholangiogram was achieved in 94 per cent and sphincterotomy was accomplished in 91.5 per cent. The bile ducts were demonstrated to be completely cleared of stones in 491 (81.6 per cent) of 602 patients. A mean number of 1.9 endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography examinations per patient were necessary to achieve this result. Complications of endoscopic sphincterotomy, which were strictly defined, occurred in 10.5 per cent of patients although five patients had two complications (total complication rate 11.3 per cent). The 30-day mortality rate was 2.2 per cent, seven of 13 deaths (1.2 per cent) occurring as a direct result of sphincterotomy. There have been statistically significant improvements in bile duct clearance and complication rates with increasing experience of endoscopists.
Erectile dysfunction (ED) is a common complication after aortoiliac surgery. The aims of this study were to determine the incidence of ED in patients with aortoiliac occlusive disease or aneurysm and evaluate the effect of revascularization by means of open surgery or iliac angioplasty/stenting upon erectile function by using the new International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF) questionnaire. All male patients who had previously undergone open aortoiliac reconstruction or iliac angioplasty/stenting and who were alive at the time of this study were first contacted by telephone. Those who agreed to take part in the study were sent anonymous IIEF questionnaires. Patients were asked to recall their sexual function before and 3 months after the procedure. ED was defined as IIEF score of <11. After telephone interview, a total of 116 patients agreed to take part in the study. The response rate was 61%. Two patients, one in each group, had ED preoperatively. The preoperative IIEF scores were no different in surgery and angioplasty/stenting groups (p=0.3). Overall, 46/63 patients reported worsening erectile function postoperatively. In the surgery group (n=37), 32 patients reported deterioration of their sexual function, 3 no change, and 2 improvement, while in the angioplasty/stenting group (n=26), 14 patients had deterioration, 11 no change, and 1 improvement. In both groups, the IIEF score decreased significantly postintervention; however, the deterioration was much more pronounced after open surgery (p<0.001). Of the 61 patients with "normal" erectile function (IIEF > or =11), 10 patients (28%) developed ED following surgery, but none after angioplasty/stenting (p=0.003). As judged by the IIEF, a significant proportion of patients undergoing open and endovascular procedures experience worsening sexual function.
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