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Case Reports
. 2018 May;22(3):e13160.
doi: 10.1111/petr.13160. Epub 2018 Apr 1.

Roux-en-Y enterolith leading to obstruction and ischemic necrosis after pediatric orthotopic liver transplantation

Affiliations
Case Reports

Roux-en-Y enterolith leading to obstruction and ischemic necrosis after pediatric orthotopic liver transplantation

Ralph C Quillin 3rd et al. Pediatr Transplant. 2018 May.

Abstract

Biliary complications are a common cause of morbidity after liver transplantation, with biliary stone formation being a known occurrence generally upstream of a stricture. A 12-year-old boy, who underwent an orthotopic liver transplantation at 11 months of age for biliary atresia, presented acutely with fever and abdominal pain. Cross-sectional imaging revealed Roux-en-Y limb dilatation and thickening. He was explored and was found to have an ischemic Roux limb secondary to an obstructing enterolith. A segmental bowel resection and revision of his hepaticojejunostomy was performed. While rare, biliary enteroliths may present as either a bowel obstruction or cholangitis and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a patient following biliary reconstruction. Additionally, anatomic etiologies should be considered and potentially surgically corrected.

Keywords: biliary reconstruction; enterolith; liver transplant.

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