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Diagnostic and Interventional Endoscopy

Understanding

What Is an Endoscopy?

An endoscope is a long fiber optic tube with a light source at its tip that can be passed through the mouth into the gastrointestinal tract. The tip of the endoscope has a small video chip that transmits images of the gastrointestinal tract to a television monitor so that the gastroenterologist can visualize the inside of the gastrointestinal tract.
Understanding

What Is Interventional Endoscopy?

During interventional endoscopy the gastroenterologist manipulates the gastrointestinal tract by instruments that are introduced through the endoscope. For example, in a patient with blockage of the bile duct the gastroenterologist inserts a small tube called a stent into the bile duct to relieve the obstruction.

A number of interventional endoscopic procedures are now available for complicated pancreatic and biliary disease. A close collaboration between the interventional gastroenterologist and a pancreatic and biliary surgeon is important to provide the optimal care to the patient. A multidisciplinary team of physicians led by an experienced pancreatic and biliary physician provides optimal care to patients with complex pancreatic and biliary diseases.

An experienced pancreatic and biliary surgeon, a gastroenterologist and medical oncologists who have a focus on pancreatic and biliary cancers often jointly evaluate patients with complex pancreatic and biliary diseases for optimal treatment planning.

Types of Interventional Endoscopic Procedures:

Bile duct stents are needed when the patient develops jaundice due to blockage of the bile duct. The gastroenterologist passes a plastic tube from the duodenum through the blockage into the bile duct so that the blockage in the bile duct is bypassed by the stent.

Two types of stents are available:

Gallbladder stones, sometimes pass into the bile duct and cause obstructive jaundice. During ERCP if the gastroenterologist finds stones in the bile then these stones can be removed during interventional endoscopy.

This procedure is usually performed in patients who have a benign (non-cancerous) stricture of the bile duct. Benign bile duct strictures are often secondary to injury to the bile duct after a laparoscopic or open cholecystectomy.

Endoscopic treatment is less effective than surgical treatment for bile duct strictures, however, for very short strictures this treatment can avoid a surgical procedure. If the strictures do not respond to endoscopic dilatation after several attempts then surgical treatment may be indicated.

Pancreatic duct stents are often placed in patients who have chronic pancreatitis or a condition called pancreatic divisum. The use of these stents is controversial and the results are variable. Multiple pancreatic duct stents placed over a long period of time or stents that are left in the pancreatic duct for prolong periods of time can by themselves cause chronic pancreatitis in some patients.

Pancreatic duct stents should be placed only after careful consideration of other treatment options that are available for the treatment of chronic pancreatitis.

Pancreatic pseudocyst is a collection of fluid that is found around the pancreas after a patient develops acute or chronic pancreatitis. Pancreatic pseudocyst is a pool of pancreatic juice that has leaked from an injured pancreatic duct. Pseudocysts form when the normal healing process seals of the pancreatic juice collections around the pancreas to form localized fluid collections.

Pseudocysts are treated by draining the cyst fluid into a loop of intestine or the stomach. Endoscopic treatment is one of the options that are available for treating pseudocysts. During endoscopic treatment a stent (a small tube) is placed between the stomach or the duodenum and the cyst so that the cyst drains into the gastrointestinal tract. An alternate method is to pass a small catheter through the pancreatic duct and into the cyst if the cyst is communicating with the pancreatic duct.

Careful selection of patients is very important for treatment of pancreatic pseudocyst with endoscopic techniques. While this technique can lead to cure of the pseudocyst in some patients; severe infective complications that require complicated surgical procedures by introducing bacteria into the cyst is a significant risk of this treatment. Endoscopic procedures may also aggravate the situation by causing pancreatitis.

Why Choose Dr. Ravi?

Dr. Ravishankar K. Diddapur

Senior Consultant Single Keyhole Laparoscopic Surgeon

MBBS, M.S (Gen Surg – KEMH, Bombay), FAMS
Over 30 years of clinical experience in gastrointestinal and metabolic surgery

Over 30 Years of Surgical Experience

Dr. Ravi has been practicing surgery for more than three decades, with extensive experience in Hepato Pancreatico Biliary conditions with advanced laparoscopic surgery inclusive of one key hole laparoscopic surgery and liver transplants

His clinical focus includes:

Dr. Ravi routinely performs laparoscopic (keyhole) and endoscopic procedures, which are associated with smaller incisions and faster recovery times compared to traditional open surgery.

(Based on standard clinical outcomes for minimally invasive techniques.)

He holds a university academic appointment and is actively involved in teaching medical students and surgical trainees in Singapore, reflecting his commitment to medical education and continuous learning.

Dr. Ravi is affiliated with various international and local professional bodies including: