An eight-week old infant with congenital hyperinsulinism has been stabilized and worked up including a PET-CT scan using 18-fluoro L-DOPA which suggests a focal lesion in the head of the pancreas. At exploration, you identify a large abnormal area in the head of the pancreas that has irregular borders and is slightly reddish in color. Biopsies with frozen sections suggest this to be a focal area of adenomatous islet cell hyperplasia with proliferation of islet cells and large nuclei. For this patient with congenital hyperinsulinism, the next best step in with management is
A pancreaticoduodenectomy (Whipple) operation.
B subtotal pancreatectomy (50 to 75%).
C pancreatic head resection with Roux en Y pancreaticojejunostomy.
D near total pancreatectomy (95 to 98%).
E limited resection of localized lesion.
A pancreaticoduodenectomy (Whipple) operation.
B subtotal pancreatectomy (50 to 75%).
C pancreatic head resection with Roux en Y pancreaticojejunostomy.
D near total pancreatectomy (95 to 98%).
E limited resection of localized lesion.
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