A 77-year-old woman with a history of total gastrectomy with Roux-en-Y anastomosis
was admitted with acute gallstone cholangitis ([Fig. 1]). We attempted endoscopic stone removal with a double-balloon enteroscope (DBE)
(EI-580BT; Fujifilm, Osaka, Japan).
Fig. 1 Computed tomography scan showed a 12-mm biliary stone in the common bile duct.
A DBE with a transparent hood was inserted, and we successfully approached the ampulla.
However, the ampulla faced away from the instrument, owing to a fold and periampullary
diverticulum. It was difficult to cannulate the bile duct, despite attempting to reposition
the ampulla to face the instrument by holding the fold using the hood. We finally
used an S-O clip (Zeon Medical, Tokyo, Japan) [1] to pull the periampullary mucosa and reposition the ampulla to face the instrument.
The S-O clip is a through-the-scope endoscopic clip with a 5-mm-long spring attached
to a single 4-mm-diameter nylon loop. Once the S-O clip was deployed to the target,
the nylon loop was pulled and attached to the distant mucosa, 5 cm away from the first
S-O clip, using a second conventional endoscopic clip, producing “countertraction.”
We visualized the orifice of the ampulla and cannulated it to access the bile duct
([Fig. 2]). The papilla was dilated to 13 mm using a large-balloon dilator (GIGA2; Century
Medical, Tokyo, Japan), and the stone was removed safely using lithotripsy (LithoCrushV;
Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) ([Fig. 3], [Video 1]), without adverse events.
Fig. 2 The orifice of the ampulla was visualized with assistance from S-O clip countertraction.
Fig. 3 The papilla was dilated to 13 mm using a large-balloon dilator, and the stone was
removed safely using lithotripsy.
Video 1 The S-O clip was used to position the ampulla to face the instrument. Then, we visualized
the orifice of the ampulla and cannulated it to access the bile duct.
Although the usefulness of the S-O clip for endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
(ERCP) has been reported for normal anatomy [2], it has never been reported in DBE-ERCP. Cannulation during enteroscopy-assisted
ERCP is sometimes difficult in patients with surgically altered anatomy. Various methods,
including the double-guidewire technique, precutting technique, and the Rendezvous
approach [3]
[4], have been reported. Although additional cases are needed, this safe and straightforward
S-O clip-assisted cannulation could be a novel and effective method of cannulation
during enteroscopy-assisted ERCP.
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_TTT_1AR_2AG
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