go to The Japanese Society of Gastroenterological Surgery official site The Japanese Journal of Gastroenterological Surgery Online Journal
go to main navigation
go to Home
go to Current Issue
go to Past Issue
go to Article Search
Abstract go to Japanese page English
Vol.23 No.11 1990 November [Table of Contents] [Full text ( PDF 525KB)]
CASE REPORT

A Case Report of Amputation Neuroma of the Common Hepatic Duct Following Cholecystectomy

Masaaki Yokota, Shuhei Iida, Nobuyuki Toshima, Ichiro Uyama, Keiji Torihama*

Department of Surgery and Internal Medicine*, Nerima General Hospital

Amputation neuroma is not a true neoplasm but an overgrowth at transected stumps of the automonous nerve fibers. We have treated a patient with amputation neuroma which occurred in the common hepatic duct after cholecystectomy. A 63-year-old woman was hospitalized with complaints of epigastralgia and jaundice. She had undergone cholecystectomy eight years previously. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography disclosed stenosis of the common hepatic duct with a smooth margin, and a common bile duct stone. On laparotomy, we found a tumor 7 mm in diameter covered with normal mucosa on the right wall of the common hepatic duct. Enucleation of the tumor and choledochotomy with T-tube insertion were carried out. Postoperatively the stenotic segment was dilated repeatedly with a balloon catheter, and improved. Histologic examination revealed that the submucosal tumor was an amputation neuroma due to the previous surgery. Amputation neuroma is one of the causes of obstructive jaundice after cholecystectomy, and awareness of this entity will lead to accurate diagnosis avoiding unneccessary extensive operations.

Key words
amputation neuroma, benign biliary tract stenosis

Jpn J Gastroenterol Surg 23: 2634-2638, 1990

Reprint requests
Masaaki Yokota Department of Surgery, Nerima General Hospital
2-41-1 Asahiga-oka, Nerima-ku, Tokyo, 176 JAPAN

Accepted
June 13, 1990

go to download site To read the PDF file you will need Abobe Reader installed on your computer.
return to the head of this page
back to main navigation
Copyright © The Japanese Society of Gastroenterological Surgery