Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery The Queen's University of Belfast Northern Ireland
Abstract
SUMMARY A prospective analysis was undertaken to assess renal function in patients with obstructive jaundice. A total of 59 jaundiced patients (serum bilirubin >100 μmol/l) undergoing biliary decompression by surgical, endoscopic or radiological means received prophylactic fluid volume expansion (3 litres crystalloid fluid intravenously) during the 24 hours before intervention. Renal function (urea and electrolytes, creatinine, creatinine clearance, urinary output) was assessed preoperatively and on days 1‐7 and on day 28 postoperatively. Two jaundiced patients (3.4%) developed renal failure (urinary output <400 ml in 24 hours in the presence of an increased serum urea and/or creatinine) and subsequently died. The overall incidence of post‐procedural renal impairment (urinary output <800 ml in 24 hours) was 10.2%. It is concluded that, with vigilant control of fluid and electrolyte balance and pre‐procedural intravenous volume expansion, the incidence of renal dysfunction in patients with obstructive jaundice is not as high as previously reported.