Table 3.
Follow-up data of the seven children
Case
|
Ultrasonography for pseudocyst
|
After ERCP acute pancreatitis onsets (times)
|
Clinical symptoms
|
Postoperative complications
|
Weight gain/yr (kg)
|
1 | At 6 mo after the operation, no pseudocyst was found by ultrasonography | 0 | Abdominal pain disappeared, able to eat | No | 5 |
2 | / | 0 | Abdominal pain disappeared, able to eat | Postoperative pancreatitis | 5 |
3 | At 3 mo after the operation, no pseudocyst was found by ultrasonography | 0 | Abdominal pain disappeared, able to eat | Infection | 8 |
4 | / | 0 | Abdominal pain disappeared, able to eat | Infection | 7 |
5 | At 4 mo after the operation, ultrasonography revealed that the pseudocyst had disappeared | 0 | Abdominal pain disappeared, able to eat | No | 3 |
6 | There was still a 16 mm × 12 mm pseudocyst | 0 | Abdominal pain disappeared, able to eat | No | 7 |
7 | / | 0 | Abdominal pain disappeared, able to eat | No | 1.5 |
8 | At 2 mo after the operation, no pseudocyst was found by ultrasonography | 0 | Abdominal pain disappeared, able to eat | No | 2 |
9 | / | 3 | Abdominal pain, but did not affect eating | No | 2 |
10 | / | 0 | Abdominal pain disappeared, able to eat | No | 3 |
ERCP: Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography.