Cholelithiasis
Cholelithiasis
Cholelithiasis
Etiology
Cholesterol stones (80%)
Pathophysiology
Clinical presentation
No peritoneal signs
Diagnosis
History:
o RUQ pain
Postprandial
Nocturnal
o Nausea, vomiting, bloating, early satiety
o Risk factors
Physical exam:
o May have no significant findings
o Mild RUQ tenderness, no peritoneal signs
Laboratory studies: complete blood count and liver function tests (LFTs) are often normal.
Imaging:
o RUQ ultrasound (US)
First test to perform for RUQ pain
95% specific for detecting stones
Shows gallstones with posterior acoustic shadow, possible sludge
o Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)
If regularultrasound is equivocal or if concurrent stone in the common bile duct(CBD) is
suspected
Medical management
Preventive therapy (to prevent symptoms and more stone formation):
o Dietary modification (↓ saturated fat intake; ↑ unsaturated fatty acids, vegetable
protein, vitamin C)
o Weight loss
o Physical activity
Medical management:
o Manage expectantly; surgical referral when symptoms develop
o Oral litholysis with Bile acids(ursodeoxycholic acid); efficacy is limited, need to take over a
long period of time (> 6 months)
o Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), spasmolytics, anti-nausea medications
(symptom relief)
Surgical management
Cholecystectomy:
o Definitive treatment when indicated
o Laparoscopic is the standard of care.
o Open surgery for difficult cases and contraindications to laparoscopy
General indications for surgery:
o Symptomatic (biliary colic) patients
o Asymptomatic patients at risk of gallbladder cancer
Porcelain gallbladder
Gallstones > 3 cm
Gallbladderadenomas
Anomalous pancreatic ductal drainage
o Asymptomatic patients with hemolytic disorders
o The following asymptomatic patients may benefit from surgery:
Diabetic Patients due to high risk for complications
Patientsundergoing bariatric surgery for weight loss
Complications/risks of surgery:
o CBD injury
o Biliary leaks
o Injury to surrounding organs
o Infection/abscess
o Postcholecystectomy syndrome (bloating, dyspepsia
Complications
Cholecystitis Cystic duct obstruction Constant RUQ pain (> 6 ↑ WBC US Urgent
with inflammation hours), Murphy’s sign cholecystectomy
Choledocholithiasis Gallstone in CBD Postprandial colicky ↑ Bilirubin, ALP US, MRCP ERCP for stone
causing obstruction RUQ pain > 6 hours; removal →
others: jaundice, acholic cholecystectomy
Primary: formed stool, dark urine, to prevent
in the bile duct
Condition Pathology Clinical presentation Laboratory Diagnostic Management
studies imaging
Acute cholangitis Choledocholithiasis Charcot’s triad: ↑ WBC, ↑ US, MRCP ERCP → emergent
with infection; with RUQ pain + bilirubin, ALP cholecystectomy
biliary sepsis (E. coli, fever + jaundice
Reynold’s
Klebsiella,
pentad:
Pseudomonas, Charcot’s triad +
Enterococcus) shock/hypotensi
on + altered
mental status
Gallstone ileus Large stone (> 2.5 cm) Small bowel obstruction ↑ WBC CT scan Surgery to extract
passing into the small (diffuse abdominal pain, the stone
Condition Pathology Clinical presentation Laboratory Diagnostic Management
studies imaging