Type IVa choledochal cysts with cylindrical dilatation of the intrahepatic ducts constitute a relatively less recognized variety of choledochal cysts, and differ from cystic dilatation of intrahepatic ducts in their clinical manifestations and response to treatment. Five patients with type IVa choledochal cysts and cylindrical dilatation of major intrahepatic ducts who underwent cyst excision and Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy are reported. The duration of symptoms was less than 1 year in all patients. Palpable abdominal mass and abdominal pain were present in 3 patients. The traid of jaundice, abdominal pain and mass was present in only 1 patient. The intrahepatic dilatation regressed after excision of the extrahepatic cyst just below the hilum of the liver. The surgical technique is described and the need for excision of the cyst is emphasized.
Perforation of the sigmoid colon is an occasional complication of blunt injury to the abdomen. We report three cases following abdominal massage (urut) by traditional healers (bomohs) in which no other underlying pathology was found.
Bladder stones in men are thought to be almost exclusively due to outflow obstruction. We studied the incidence of operations for urinary outflow obstruction and bladder stone to establish the relationship between these two conditions in Kelantan. In only 48 (31%) of 154 men undergoing removal of bladder stones was a procedure for outflow obstruction performed. Thus the remaining 69% had no clinical obstruction to account for their stones. Bladder stones were more common in prostatectomy patients than expected (42/193: 22%). We suggest that other causes may be important in the aetiology of bladder stones in Kelantan.
216 patients were found to have had surgery for urinary calculi In a retrospective analysis of surgical records of the two general hospitals in Kelantan over a two year period. Excluding 11 patients from Terengganu and 2 patients resident in Kelantan for less than 1 year, this amounts to an annual incidence for calculus surgery of 10 per 100,000 residents per year. Lower urinary tract (LT) calculi (143) were more common than upper urinary tract (UT) calculi (71). There was an overwhelming majority of males among patients operated on for LT calculi (ratio of males:females = 1.2:1). The mean age of patients with UT calculi was 44 years, while that of LT calculi was 51 years.