Laparoscopic evaluation and resection of type-II choledochal cyst arising from right hepatic duct mimicking gall bladder duplication

A Type II choledochal cyst arising from the right hepatic duct may mimic a gall bladder duplication. Both are rare and may not get differentiated before operative exploration. While a magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) may be helpful, laparoscopy may be the final tool for evaluation...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rajesh Bhojwani, Nikhil Jain, Subhash Mishra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Minimal Access Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journalofmas.com/article.asp?issn=0972-9941;year=2019;volume=15;issue=2;spage=158;epage=160;aulast=Bhojwani
id doaj-da72fd0708554bda8705bb37930f98d9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-da72fd0708554bda8705bb37930f98d92020-11-25T01:29:07ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsJournal of Minimal Access Surgery0972-99411998-39212019-01-0115215816010.4103/jmas.JMAS_101_18Laparoscopic evaluation and resection of type-II choledochal cyst arising from right hepatic duct mimicking gall bladder duplicationRajesh BhojwaniNikhil JainSubhash MishraA Type II choledochal cyst arising from the right hepatic duct may mimic a gall bladder duplication. Both are rare and may not get differentiated before operative exploration. While a magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) may be helpful, laparoscopy may be the final tool for evaluation and effective surgical treatment. We report such a case of a 22-year-old male whose MRCP was suggestive of a cystic lesion in the gall bladder fossa and was taken up for surgery with a pre-operative diagnosis of gall bladder duplication with a single cystic duct. He underwent elective laparoscopic evaluation, mobilisation, discerning of anatomy and diagnosis, excision of cyst and concomitant cholecystectomy. This case highlights that these two rare entities can mimic each other on imaging; however, a laparoscopic approach serves the dual purpose of diagnosing and treating this unique pathoanatomical entity.http://www.journalofmas.com/article.asp?issn=0972-9941;year=2019;volume=15;issue=2;spage=158;epage=160;aulast=BhojwaniBiliary anomaliescholedochal cystgall bladder duplicationlaparoscopicsurgery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rajesh Bhojwani
Nikhil Jain
Subhash Mishra
spellingShingle Rajesh Bhojwani
Nikhil Jain
Subhash Mishra
Laparoscopic evaluation and resection of type-II choledochal cyst arising from right hepatic duct mimicking gall bladder duplication
Journal of Minimal Access Surgery
Biliary anomalies
choledochal cyst
gall bladder duplication
laparoscopic
surgery
author_facet Rajesh Bhojwani
Nikhil Jain
Subhash Mishra
author_sort Rajesh Bhojwani
title Laparoscopic evaluation and resection of type-II choledochal cyst arising from right hepatic duct mimicking gall bladder duplication
title_short Laparoscopic evaluation and resection of type-II choledochal cyst arising from right hepatic duct mimicking gall bladder duplication
title_full Laparoscopic evaluation and resection of type-II choledochal cyst arising from right hepatic duct mimicking gall bladder duplication
title_fullStr Laparoscopic evaluation and resection of type-II choledochal cyst arising from right hepatic duct mimicking gall bladder duplication
title_full_unstemmed Laparoscopic evaluation and resection of type-II choledochal cyst arising from right hepatic duct mimicking gall bladder duplication
title_sort laparoscopic evaluation and resection of type-ii choledochal cyst arising from right hepatic duct mimicking gall bladder duplication
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Journal of Minimal Access Surgery
issn 0972-9941
1998-3921
publishDate 2019-01-01
description A Type II choledochal cyst arising from the right hepatic duct may mimic a gall bladder duplication. Both are rare and may not get differentiated before operative exploration. While a magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) may be helpful, laparoscopy may be the final tool for evaluation and effective surgical treatment. We report such a case of a 22-year-old male whose MRCP was suggestive of a cystic lesion in the gall bladder fossa and was taken up for surgery with a pre-operative diagnosis of gall bladder duplication with a single cystic duct. He underwent elective laparoscopic evaluation, mobilisation, discerning of anatomy and diagnosis, excision of cyst and concomitant cholecystectomy. This case highlights that these two rare entities can mimic each other on imaging; however, a laparoscopic approach serves the dual purpose of diagnosing and treating this unique pathoanatomical entity.
topic Biliary anomalies
choledochal cyst
gall bladder duplication
laparoscopic
surgery
url http://www.journalofmas.com/article.asp?issn=0972-9941;year=2019;volume=15;issue=2;spage=158;epage=160;aulast=Bhojwani
work_keys_str_mv AT rajeshbhojwani laparoscopicevaluationandresectionoftypeiicholedochalcystarisingfromrighthepaticductmimickinggallbladderduplication
AT nikhiljain laparoscopicevaluationandresectionoftypeiicholedochalcystarisingfromrighthepaticductmimickinggallbladderduplication
AT subhashmishra laparoscopicevaluationandresectionoftypeiicholedochalcystarisingfromrighthepaticductmimickinggallbladderduplication
_version_ 1725098509370130432