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Strictures, stones and cysts: an unusual cause of pancreatitis in a 20-month-old female child.

Alina Gertrud ZufallJeremy P MiddletonSara RasmussenReza J Daugherty
Published in: BMJ case reports (2020)
Choledochal cysts are dilations of the biliary tree that cause a variety of clinical symptoms and can lead to several types of complications. Choledochal cysts are most commonly diagnosed in childhood and frequently present with abdominal pain, jaundice and, in infants, an abdominal mass. Although the most concerning complication is malignant transformation of the cyst epithelium, other complications such as stone formation, acute pancreatitis and stricture can also occur and lead to patient morbidity. Treatment is aimed at not only relieving patient symptoms, but also decreasing a long-term cancer risk. We present a case of a child presenting with abdominal pain and vomiting secondary to a type IVa choledochal cyst complicated by acute pancreatitis, a common bile duct stricture and cystolithiasis.
Keyphrases
  • abdominal pain
  • case report
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  • risk factors
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  • young adults
  • depressive symptoms
  • smoking cessation
  • urinary tract