[Postcholecystectomy syndrome in children, fact or fiction?]
Түлхүүр үгс
Хураангуй
BACKGROUND
The postcholecystectomy syndrome (SPC) is broadly defined and published in adults, whereas in the pediatric population are hardly any articles about it. Up to a third of adults have dyspeptic symptoms without organic cause the first year after cholecystectomy. Our goal is to determine the incidence of SPC in our population.
METHODS
An observational study was performed, collecting data from patients who had been done laparoscopic cholecystectomy in our hospital since 2005. Patients diagnosed choledochal cyst and biliary atresia were excluded. The following data were collected: type of dyspeptic symptoms, scheduled office visits and emergency units in the first postoperative year and in the following. Children who did not make any visits, a telephone survey was conducted.
RESULTS
Data from 36 patients, including 3 patients who were excluded for presenting organic cause, were collected. The most frequent diagnosis was idiopathic cholelithiasis (64,7%). Sixteen children (48,5%) had postoperative symptoms in the first year, of which 14 went to scheduled office visit and 6 emergent (2 required hospitalization). The main symptoms were abdominal postoperative pain (100%), nausea (62,5%) and vomiting (50%). After the first year (6 patients were excluded for less follow-up), only 5 patients (18,5%) continued to symptoms (p= 0,015), 2 required visit to programmatically consultation and no one emergent.
CONCLUSIONS
In our sample, SPC in children exists and improves after the first year. So postoperative follow-up is an important fact, and only further tests must be done if signs of organic cause.