Objective?To assess the effectiveness and safety of diclofenac, one of the routine-used NSAIDs, in preventing post-endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography pancreatitis (PEP). Methods Firstly, the electronic searches were conducted to retrieve Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) from The Cochrane Library, PubMed, Embase, OVID, CBM, CNKI, VIP and WanFang Data. Secondly, 12 kinds of specific Chinese journals like Chinese Journal of Gastroenterology and conference proceedings were hand-searched till June 2011, and all references in all included trials were searched, too. The RCTs on diclofenac for preventing PEP were identified and retrieved. The systematic review was conducted by using methods and principles recommended by the Cochrane Collaboration. Results A total of 5 RCTs involving 675 PEP patients were included. The Meta-analysis showed that diclofenac might reduce the incidence of PEP (OR=0.41, 95%CI 0.18 to 0.95, P=0.04), but the sensitivity analysis indicated this result was not stable. No evidence showed diclofenac could reduce the incidence of severe PEP (OR=0.40, 95%CI 0.08 to 2.06, P=0.27). And no adverse reactions related to the drug were reported. Conclusion Diclofenac may be safe and effective in reducing the incidence of PEP, but it has no significant effect on preventing severe PEP. Considering the methodological and scale limitation of included studies, this conclusion still needs to be proved by more large-scale and high-quality RCTs.
Objective To analyze and explain how to treat 1 patient with post-ERCP hemobilia based on best clinical evidence. Methods We used EST and EPBD, ENBD, Hemobilia as key words to search MEDLINE (1978 ~ 2004) and CBMdisc(1978 ~ 2004) to find the best clinical evidence and evaluated the quality of evidence. Results According to the evidence, we found that endoscopic papillary balloon dilation (EPBD) or endoscopic nasobiliary drainage ( ENBD ) may be more effective and better tolerated in the treatment ofpost-ERCP hemobilia. Our patient did not receive sufficient medical treatment after hemobilia. He was not given a general assessment before surgery including liver function tests. As a result, the patient died of liver failure and its complications. Conclusions We should treat such patients promptly and efficiendy after hemobilia. We should also evaluate their general condition properly before the operation.
Objective To evaluate the safety and efficacy of simultaneous endoscopic bilateral placement of selfexpandable metal biliary stents in malignant hilar biliary obstruction. MethodFrom May 2007 to December 2010, a total of 24 patients with hilar malignancy of Bismuth type Ⅱ to Ⅳ underwent endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) and bilateral metal stent placement. Technical success rate, functional success rate, ERCP related complications, stents’ patency time, and patient’ survival time were recorded and reviewed. Results Twentyone of 24 patients were followedup for average 39 months. Technical success rate was 100%, the average operation time was (36.2±13.9) min, the functional success rate was 95.45%. Mild cholangitis occurred in 2 cases and there was no ERCP related pancreatitis, bleeding, perforation, and death. Stents dysfunction occurred in 7 within followup period. Amonge them, plastic stents were inserted through the metallic stents in 4 cases, PTCD was required in 1 case, and conservative therapy was given in the other 2 cases. The median stent’ patency time and median patient’ survival time were 253 d (95% CI: 199.79-306.21) and 229 (95% CI : 154.53-303.47), respectively, with no significant differences between Bismuth classification types. ConclusionEndoscopic simultaneous bilateral biliary metal stent placement is technically feasible, safe, and effective to malignant hilar obstruction.
Objective To evaluate the diagnostic value of magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) in obstructive jaundice. Methods Forty eight consecutive patients with obstructive jaundice were examined by MRCP, all results were testified during and /or after operation. Results Different causes of obstruction had their own characteristic manifestations. Level of obstruction was accurate in 100%, the accuracy in distinguishing obstructive causes was 93.8%. Conclusion MRCP is quite effective, safe and reliable in diagnosis of obstructive jaundice.