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Postoperative T Tube cholangiographies of 311 patients from 1980 to February 1992 were evaluated by studying the patient histories and x-ray examinations. Most frequent questions concerned residual stones and papillary occlusion. Most frequent pathological findings were dilatation of the choledochus and of the bile ducts, residual stones and paravasations.

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Decrease in gall-bladder volume after intake of a test meal was assessed by ultrasound in 30 patients (24 females, 6 males; mean age 55 [22-82] years) with indications for elective or early elective cholecystectomy for cholelithiasis. Patients were assigned to three groups, based on intraoperative and histological gall-bladder changes: group 1 (n = 17), without changes or with mild chronic cholecystitis; group 2 (n = 4), with severe chronic inflammatory changes; group 3 (n = 9), with acute cholecystitis or cystic duct occlusion. A volume decrease of at least 30% after the test meal excluded only acute wall inflammation (negative predictive value 95.

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Between 1950 and 1980, a total of 145 patients with pain-free gallstones in the gallbladder and open cystic duct were followed for a mean observation period of 13.5 years. Pigment stones made up 25.

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Postoperative cholangiography using the T-drain canal (PCST) with flexible fibre endoscopes was done in five patients. Cases were palliative papillary drainage in malignant occlusion, passage of the intact papilla, expulsion of concrement through the cut papilla, bougienage of inflammatory bile duct stenosis with lavage removal of stone, and an endoscopic selective peripheral bile duct drainage. In one female bile duct stone wedging after endoscopic sphincterotomy of the papilla during chemical litholysis had occurred previously.

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