Nonoperative management of biliopleural fistula following living‐donor liver transplantation: A case report

Author:

Kazemi Kourosh1,Rasekhi Alireza12,Nazari Sahar Sohrabi1,Lashkarizadeh Mohammad Mehdi1,Shamsaeefar Alireza1,Alikhani Mohammad1,Akbari Ali1,Shahriarirad Reza23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Shiraz Transplant Center Abu Ali Sina Hospital, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences Shiraz Iran

2. School of Medicine Shiraz University of Medical Sciences Shiraz Iran

3. Thoracic and Vascular Surgery Research Center Shiraz University of Medical Science Shiraz Iran

Abstract

Key Clinical MessageBiliopleural fistula is a rare but serious complication after liver transplantation that should be managed nonoperatively with antibiotics, pleural drainage, decompression of high‐pressure biliary tract, or ultimately surgery in unresponsive cases.AbstractBilious pleural effusion is a rare entity often iatrogenic, following hepatobiliary surgeries and biliary interventions, and has been reported only in a limited number of patients after liver transplantation. A 5‐year‐old girl underwent living donor liver transplantation due to progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis. At the 7th day of the postoperative course, due to increased liver enzymes and bilirubin levels and intrahepatic bile duct dilatation on sonography, Magnetic Resonance Cholangiopancreaticography followed by a liver biopsy were performed; the findings demonstrated moderate intrahepatic bile duct dilatation and moderate cellular rejection associated with mild cholestasis, respectively. The patient was therefore administered a pulse of methylprednisolone; however, due to fever, peritonitis and also sonographic evidence of infected biloma collection adjacent to the transplanted liver, the patient underwent surgery. Laparotomy and peritoneal washout were performed and a Jackson‐Pratt drain was inserted adjacent to the liver cut surface. Succeeding tachypnea on 28th post day, led to detection of right side massive pleural effusion on chest Xray and hence thoracostomy tube was inserted. A diagnosis of biliopleural fistula was established and broad‐spectrum intravenous antibiotic therapy was started, followed by cholangiography, fistula closure, and bile duct stricture ballooning and internal‐external biliary catheter insertion. The patient was discharged in generally good condition on the 50th posttransplant day. The diagnosis of biliopleural fistula is facilitated with the utilization of chest imaging and pleural fluid analysis, however, a high index of suspicion is required.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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