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DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1365378
Endoscopic retrieval of a proximally migrated biliary plastic stent using a guidewire loop technique
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Publication History
Publication Date:
07 May 2014 (online)
Endoscopic biliary stent placement is a well-established technique for various indications including biliary drainage. However, it has been shown that approximately 5 % of plastic stents placed in the biliary tract migrate proximally [1]. Endoscopic retrieval of proximally migrated biliary stents is technically challenging and occasionally unsuccessful. Several techniques for retrieving proximally migrated plastic stent have been reported [2] [3]. We report a novel technique of retrieving a proximally migrated biliary stent using a guidewire loop technique.
A 65-year-old woman visited our institution because of acute cholangitis. She had undergone cholecystectomy 2 years before this admission. Physical examination revealed fever, jaundice, and mild tenderness over the right upper quadrant. Murphy’s sign was negative. Laboratory studies demonstrated a white blood cell count of 23 000/μL (normal, 4500 – 10 000/μL), and a total bilirubin concentration of 2.7 mg/dL (normal, 0.2 – 1.2 mg/dL). The patient underwent emergent endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) for biliary decompression. The ERCP image revealed common bile duct (CBD) dilatation with small filling defects in the distal CBD. A 7-cm, 7-Fr biliary stent was inserted. However, 2 months after the initial ERCP, the patient presented at the emergency department with fever and abdominal pain. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography of the abdomen revealed that the biliary stent had migrated proximally into the CBD ([Fig. 1]). A second ERCP was undertaken to retrieve the migrated stent. A retrieval basket (FG-23Q-1; Olympus Medical Systems Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) grasping the distal end of a 0.035-inch straight guidewire (Jagwire; Boston Scientific Corporation, Natick, MA, USA) was used to retrieve the migrated stent ([Fig. 2]). After successful biliary cannulation, the guidewire was slightly pushed forward to form a loop within the CBD ([Fig. 3]). By simultaneously pulling the retrieval basket and the guidewire backward, the distal side flap of the biliary stent was caught by the guidewire loop and the stent was successfully retrieved.






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Competing interests: None
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References
- 1 Johanson JF, Schmalz MJ, Geenen JE. Incidence and risk factors for biliary and pancreatic stent migration. Gastrointest Endosc 1992; 38: 341-346
- 2 Chaurasia OP, Rauws EA, Fockens P et al. Endoscopic techniques for retrieval of proximally migrated biliary stents: the Amsterdam experience. Gastrointest Endosc 1999; 50: 780-785
- 3 Okabe Y, Tsuruta O, Kaji R et al. Endoscopic retrieval of migrated plastic stent into bile duct or pancreatic pseudocyst. Dig Endosc 2009; 21: 1-7
Corresponding author
-
References
- 1 Johanson JF, Schmalz MJ, Geenen JE. Incidence and risk factors for biliary and pancreatic stent migration. Gastrointest Endosc 1992; 38: 341-346
- 2 Chaurasia OP, Rauws EA, Fockens P et al. Endoscopic techniques for retrieval of proximally migrated biliary stents: the Amsterdam experience. Gastrointest Endosc 1999; 50: 780-785
- 3 Okabe Y, Tsuruta O, Kaji R et al. Endoscopic retrieval of migrated plastic stent into bile duct or pancreatic pseudocyst. Dig Endosc 2009; 21: 1-7





