acute cholangitis
Why a Single Contrast Injection Can Be Fatal...
Video case: why a aingle contrast injection can be fatal in acute aholangitis?
The Parasite was Already Trying to Escape. We...
The hydatid membrane was at the papilla before the sphincterotome arrived. No contrast. No cholangiogram. The parasite was already delivering its own diagnosis. Today at Clinique Les Oliviers: general...
When One Scope Reveals Three Diagnoses
Clinical case: when one scope reveals three diagnoses. A 38-year-old woman. Acute pancreatitis grade A, with acute cholangitis and lower CBD stone on MRCP. On CT, there was also an asymptomatic ileal...
Impacted Stone
The "Black Liquid" moment: Strategic Decompression in Acute Cholangitis. This is a fantastic clinical "save." Moving from a bulky, non-cannulable papilla to a successful stone...
Navigating the Pyloric Border, ERCP for Choledocho-duodenal...
Expert management of mature CDA strictures using (brand hidden) and side-viewing pivot high-stakes cases require more than just technical skill - they require anatomical adaptability. I recently...
Modern Approach to a Complex Gallstone Problem
33 years old patient referred for acute severe cholangitis with an elarged CBD and 8 mm stone. Multiple Stones in the gallbladder. The Problem: Why This Wasn't Standard 1. Acute Cholangitis: This...
Double Balloon Dilatation During ERCP
A 75-year-old patient presents with acute cholangitis and a history of open surgery for acute cholangitis 40 years ago. CT scan reveals a 12 mm common bile duct (CBD) containing a 12 mm stone. During...
ERCP for Acute Severe Hydatic Cholangtis
A 72-year-old patient presented with severe acute cholangitis associated with a hepatic hydatic cyst, following unsuccessful surgical treatment. The patient also exhibited acute renal failure and abnormal...
ERCP for Acute Hydatic Cholangitis
Clinical video case: Acute cholangitis related to liver hydatic cyst with bilaary fistula.
Acute And Chronic Cholangitis
Which parts of the cut sections of the liver show the inflammatory changes? What is the usual cause of cholangitis? Why might this be called acute and chronic from a histopathological point of view?...