To investigate the clinical application value of indocyanine green fluorescence cholangiography in laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) for patients with liver cirrhosis and HIV infection. A retrospective analysis was performed on patients with liver cirrhosis combined with HIV infection who underwent LC at the Department of Hepatobiliary Surgery, Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center, from February 2023 to February 2025. They were divided into an observation group (n = 64) and a control group (n = 62) based on whether indocyanine green fluorescence cholangiography was applied during surgery. Basic data, operation time, time to reach the critical view of safety (CVS), identification of extrahepatic bile ducts, intraoperative blood loss, conversion rate to laparotomy, catheterization rate, postoperative hospital stay, bile duct injury and biliary fistula, and hematological indicators were compared between the two groups. Compared with the control group, the observation group showed significantly shorter operation time, time to reach the critical view of safety (CVS), catheter indwelling time and postoperative hospital stay, as well as significantly less intraoperative blood loss, and lower conversion rate to laparotomy, catheterization rate, incidence of bile duct injury and biliary fistula (all P 0.05). Cellular immunity (absolute CD4 + cell count, CD4 + /CD8 + ratio) and humoral immunity indicators showed no significant differences between the two groups (P > 0.05). No incision infections, poor wound healing, abdominal pain, or jaundice occurred in either group postoperatively. No adverse reactions to indocyanine green were observed in the observation group. The use of indocyanine green fluorescence cholangiography during LC in patients with liver cirrhosis and HIV infection enhances the identification of extrahepatic bile ducts, reduces operation time, and significantly decreases the incidence of iatrogenic bile duct injury. This approach is safe and feasible.
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Meng Zhang
Yi Chen
Jiao Liu
European journal of medical research
Tongji University
Shanghai Tenth People's Hospital
Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine
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Zhang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d892d16c1944d70ce0406e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-026-04154-w