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"E H Hwhang"

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"E H Hwhang"

Original Article

[English]
Biliary Atresia in Korea: A Survey by the Korean Association of Pediatric Surgeons
K J Choi, S C Kim, S K Kim, W K Kim, I K Kim, J E Kim, J C Kim, H Y Kim, H H Kim, K W Park, W H Park, Y T Song, S M Oh, D S Lee, S K Lee, S C Lee, S Y Jhung, S E Jhung, P M Jung, S O Choi, S H Choi, S J Han, Y S Huh, C Hong, E H Hwhang
J Korean Assoc Pediatr Surg 2002;8(2):143-155.   Published online December 31, 2002
DOI: https://doi.org/10.13029/jkaps.2002.8.2.143

A survey on biliary atresia was made among 26 members of the Korean Association of Pediatric Surgeons. The members were required to complete a questionnaire and a case registration form for each patient during the twentyone-year period of 1980-2000. Three hundred and eighty patients were registered from 18 institutions. The average number of patients per surgeon was one to two every year. The male to female ratio was 1 : 1.3. The age of patients on diagnosis with biliary atresia was on average 65.4 ±36.2 days old. The national distribution was 32.8% in Seoul, 25.3% in Gyoungki-Do, 21.6% in Gyoungsang-Do, 9.27% in Choongchung-Do, etc. in order. The most common clinical presentation was jaundice (98.4%) and change of stool color (86.2%) was second. Two hundred eighty (74.7%) of 375 patients were operated by 80 days of age. Three hundred thirty six (91.9%) of 366 patients were operated on by the original Kasai procedure, and 305 (84.3%) of 362 patients were observed by bile-drainage postoperatively. The overall postoperative complication rate was 18.5% and the overall postoperative mortality rate was 6.8%. The associated anomalies were observed in 72 cases (22.5%). One hundred ninty five (64.7%) of 302 patients have been alive in follow-up and 49 (25.1%) have survived over 5 years without problem after operation. Ascending cholangitis, varices and ascites affected survival significantly, and the important long-term prognostic factor was the occurrence of complications.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • A Comparative Study of Three National Surveys on Biliary Atresia by the Korean Association of Pediatric Surgeons
    Yeon Jun Jeong, Dayoung Ko, Hyunhee Kwon, Ki Hoon Kim, Dae Yeon Kim, Soo-Hong Kim, Wontae Kim, Hae-Young Kim, Hyun Young Kim, Seong Chul Kim, Younghyun Na, Jung-Man Namgoong, So Hyun Nam, Junbeom Park, Jinyoung Park, Tae-Jun Park, Jeong-Meen Seo, Ji-Young
    Advances in Pediatric Surgery.2025; 31(2): 47.     CrossRef
  • Biliary Atresia -A Survey by the Korean Association of Pediatric Surgeons in 2011-
    JT Oh, DY Kim, SC Kim, IK Kim, HY Kim, H-Y Kim, SH Nam, KW Park, WH Park, JY Park, JM Seo, NH Lee, MD Lee, SK Lee, SC Lee, SY Chung, SE Jung, JH Chung, KJ Choi, SO Choi, SH Choi, YM Choi, SJ Han, J Hong
    Journal of the Korean Association of Pediatric Surgeons.2013; 19(1): 1.     CrossRef
  • Clinical Characteristics and VPS33B Mutations in Patients With ARC Syndrome
    Joo Young Jang, Kyung Mo Kim, Gu‐Hwan Kim, Eunsil Yu, Jin‐Joo Lee, Young Seo Park, Han‐Wook Yoo
    Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition.2009; 48(3): 348.     CrossRef
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