Lee W M, Silva F, Price J B
Cancer. 1982 Jun 15;49(12):2596-601. doi: 10.1002/1097-0142(19820615)49:12<2596::aid-cncr2820491231>3.0.co;2-6.
A middle-aged woman with evidence of chronic cholestasis of several years and no previous abdominal surgery was initially thought to have primary biliary cirrhosis. Clinical evaluation disclosed a well-developed secondary biliary cirrhosis apparently caused by extrahepatic obstruction due to a 1 X 2 cm neoplasm of the periampullary duodenum. Electron microscopy and immunofluorescent studies showed the neoplasm to be a G-cell adenoma. Wide local excision has resolved the biliary obstruction. Bening or slow-growing duodenal tumors, if they involve the ampulla of Vater, may produce prolonged partial extrahepatic obstruction and secondary biliary cirrhosis.