In some patients with congenital biliary dilation (CBD), biliary cirrhosis has been reported to rapidly progress from the neonatal period to the infantile period. We herein report an infantile case of CBD that showed severe biliary cirrhosis at the diagnosis, which was treated by laparoscopic surgery.
A 16-month-old girl underwent conservative therapy for liver dysfunction and cholangitis on a remote island of our prefecture. She was transferred to our hospital after the detection of a huge dilated common bile duct on imaging at the previous hospital. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography showed a dilated common bile duct (maximum diameter: 5 cm), thus suggesting CBD. However, her laboratory data on admission showed a poor nutritional status and severe liver dysfunction (Alb, 2.5 mg/dl; AST, 79 IU/L; ALT, 43 IU/L; γ-GTP, 491 mg/dl; D-bil, 0.3 mg/dl; CHE, 90 IU/L; NH3, 123 μg/dl). We initially performed laparoscopic exploration and bile drainage
Severe liver fibrosis was suspected to be continuous cholestasis of CBD after birth. CBD with severe liver fibrosis may avoid liver transplantation by two-stage surgery with hepatoprotection therapy and immunonutritional support.