Management of patients with obstructive jaundice: experience in a developing country.

Link to article at PubMed

Management of patients with obstructive jaundice: experience in a developing country.

Nig Q J Hosp Med. 2011 Jan-Mar;21(1):75-9

Authors: Rahman GA, Yusuf IF, Faniyi AO, Etonyeaku AC

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgical Obstructive Jaundice can be life-threatening. Management of these patients can be a major diagnostic and therapeutic challenge.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to determine the sociodemographic data of patients with obstructive jaundice, clinical, laboratory and radiological findings as well as surgical procedures done and immediate postoperative outcome in a tertiary health institution.
METHODS: Patients who presented in a Nigerian tertiary health institution with surgical obstructive jaundice between. January 1991 and December 2004 were retrospectively studied. Information was extracted from clinical records, operation notes and histopathology records. Data was entered into SPSS version 11.0 for windows to generate frequency table, percentages, proportion, histogram and pie chart.
RESULTS: Sixty-four patients with obstructive jaundice were managed during the study period. Majority of the patients were in the 6th decade of life. More than 50% of the patients have had symptoms for more than 4 weeks before presentation. Carcinoma of the head of pancreas was the cause of obstructive jaundice in more than 60% of the patients. About 47% of the patients had cholecystojejunostomy and operative mortality was 15.6%.
CONCLUSION: Carcinoma head of pancreas is the commonest cause of obstructive jaundice in Nigeria with many of the patients in the 6th decade. Diagnosis and management continue to be a challenge especially as a result of late presentation and limited radiological facilities. Patients benefited from palliative surgical intervention in form of bili-enteric diversion.

PMID: 21913546 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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