Gallbladder cancer surgery: Difference between revisions
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==Surgery== | ==Surgery== | ||
Gallbladder cancer may be treated with a [[cholecystectomy]], [[surgery]] to remove the [[gallbladder]] and some of the tissues around it. Nearby [[lymph nodes]] may be removed. A [[laparoscope]] is sometimes used to guide gallbladder surgery. The [[laparoscope]] is attached to a video camera and inserted through an incision (port) in the abdomen. Surgical instruments are inserted through other ports to perform the surgery. Because there is a risk that gallbladder cancer cells may spread to these ports, tissue surrounding the port sites may also be removed. | Gallbladder cancer may be treated with a [[cholecystectomy]], [[surgery]] to remove the [[gallbladder]] and some of the tissues around it. Nearby [[lymph nodes]] may be removed. A [[laparoscope]] is sometimes used to guide gallbladder surgery. The [[laparoscope]] is attached to a video camera and inserted through an incision (port) in the abdomen. Surgical instruments are inserted through other ports to perform the surgery. Because there is a risk that gallbladder cancer cells may spread to these ports, tissue surrounding the port sites may also be removed. The following proceedures are recommended. | ||
*Cholecystectomy | |||
*Radical gallbladder resection | |||
*Palliative surgery | |||
If the cancer has spread and cannot be removed, the following types of palliative surgery may relieve symptoms: | If the cancer has spread and cannot be removed, the following types of palliative surgery may relieve symptoms: | ||
Revision as of 19:38, 12 April 2016
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Parminder Dhingra, M.D. [2]
Overview
The mainstay of therapy for gallbladder cancer is surgery.
Surgery
Gallbladder cancer may be treated with a cholecystectomy, surgery to remove the gallbladder and some of the tissues around it. Nearby lymph nodes may be removed. A laparoscope is sometimes used to guide gallbladder surgery. The laparoscope is attached to a video camera and inserted through an incision (port) in the abdomen. Surgical instruments are inserted through other ports to perform the surgery. Because there is a risk that gallbladder cancer cells may spread to these ports, tissue surrounding the port sites may also be removed. The following proceedures are recommended.
- Cholecystectomy
- Radical gallbladder resection
- Palliative surgery
If the cancer has spread and cannot be removed, the following types of palliative surgery may relieve symptoms:
- Surgical biliary bypass: If the tumor is blocking the small intestine and bile is building up in the gallbladder, a biliary bypass may be done. During this operation, the gallbladder or bile duct will be cut and sewn to the small intestine to create a new pathway around the blocked area.
- Endoscopic stent placement: If the tumor is blocking the bile duct, surgery may be done to put in a stent (a thin, flexible tube) to drain bile that has built up in the area. The stent may be placed through a catheter that drains to the outside of the body or the stent may go around the blocked area and drain the bile into the small intestine.
- Percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage: A procedure done to drain bile when there is a blockage and endoscopic stent placement is not possible. An x-ray of the liver and bile ducts is done to locate the blockage. Images made by ultrasound are used to guide placement of a stent, which is left in the liver to drain bile into the small intestine or a collection bag outside the body. This procedure may be done to relieve jaundice before surgery.[1]
References