Urgent Endoscopic Biliary Procedures: “Run Like the Wind”?
Francesca Lodato, Stefano Landi, Marco Bassi, Stefania Ghersi, Vincenzo Cennamo

TL;DR
This paper reviews which biliary tract conditions need urgent endoscopic treatment and discusses the implications for healthcare organization.
Contribution
The paper clarifies which biliary tract pathologies require urgent endoscopy and outlines organizational strategies based on international guidelines.
Findings
Severe acute cholangitis (ACh) requires urgent endoscopic treatment within 12 hours.
Other biliary tract conditions can be treated within 72 hours, allowing for more flexible scheduling.
Organizational challenges arise due to the need for trained biliary endoscopists available 24/7.
Abstract
Emergency endoscopy is an activity that must be guaranteed 7 days a week and 24 h a day. The pathologies of endoscopic interest that require emergency intervention are mainly hemorrhages of the upper digestive tract, the removal of foreign bodies, and the ingestion of caustics. The emergency endoscopist must therefore be experienced in the management of these pathologies. Nowadays, however, we know that even some biliary tract pathologies must be managed within a variable period between 12 and 72 h, in particular acute cholangitis (Ach), acute biliary pancreatitis (ABP), biliary duct leaks (BDLs), and acute cholecystitis (AC). If, on one hand, there is little awareness among doctors about which pathologies of the biliary tract really deserve urgent treatment, on the other, the international guidelines, although not uniformly, have acquired the results of the studies and have clarified…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGallbladder and Bile Duct Disorders · Esophageal and GI Pathology · Pancreatic and Hepatic Oncology Research
