Cholelithiasis

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Definition

Cholelithiasis is the presence of gallstones in the gallbladder

Etiology
Cholesterol stones (80%)

 Precipitates of mostly Cholesterol with bile salts, calcium, and mucin


 Risk factors:
o Obesity
o Rapid weight loss (often after bariatric surgery)
o Diabetes
o Dyslipidemia
o Genetic predisposition
o Pregnancy(impaired Gallbladder emptying caused by progesterone)
o Medications (hormone therapy, oral
contraceptives, ceftriaxone, fibrates, somatostatin analogs)
o Prolonged fasting
o Parenteral nutrition
o Spinal cord injuryPigment stones (10%)

 Caused by excess bilirubin


 Black stones consist of mostly calcium bilirubinate.
 Risk factors:
o Cirrhosis
o Crohn’s disease/ileal resection
o Hemolytic anemias (hereditary spherocytosis, thalassemias, sickle cell disease)
o Advanced age Brown stones ("mixed"; 10%)

 Bacterial infection or parasitic infestation


 Often form in bile ducts
 Most common in Asian populations

Pathophysiology

 Cholesterolstones (3 mechanisms overlap):


o Cholesterol supersaturation of bile
 Hypersecretion of cholesterol (80% from dietary origin)
 Decreased concentration of phospholipids and bile salts
(thatsolubilize cholesterol)→ cholesterol precipitation
o Gallbladder hypomotility (stasis)
 Associated with certain conditions: diabetes, pregnancy, parenteralnutrition
 Cholesterolmicrocrystals are not flushed out effectively→ gallbladdersludge
o Nucleation
 Mucin (secreted by biliary epithelium) promotes crystallization of cholesterolin the sludge.
 Gallstones form and grow larger, further promoted by Gallbladder stasis.
 Black pigment stones:
o Overproduction of bilirubin (hemolysis increases unconjugated bilirubin)
o Decrease in hepatic cycling of bilirubin (cirrhosis)
 Mixed/brown pigment stones:
o Related to infections (bacterial or parasitic infestation, e.g., clonorchiasis)
o Often form in Bile ducts
o Lytic enzymes from bacteria/parasites hydrolyze Bile lecithin→ fatty acids,
which bind calcium
o Calciumsalts + bilirubin + cholesterol → brown stones
 Variant pathology: “porcelain” gallbladder
o Not a gallstone but often found in conjunction with gallstones
o Calcifications in the gallbladder wall, with mechanism felt to be the same as gallstones
o Increased risk of gallbladder cancer

Clinical presentation

 Asymptomatic (80%): Gallstones are found on imaging incidentally.


 Biliary colic:
o Gallstone moves and transiently obstructs the Cystic duct.
o Constant, dull right upper quadrant (RUQ) pain:
 Lasting < 6 hours
 Postprandial or nocturnal
 May radiate to the epigastrium, right shoulder, and back ,Nausea, vomiting

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

Can detect very small stones

o Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP)


 If the ultrasound is equivocal
 If CBD stone is also 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

Condition Pathology Clinical presentation Laboratory Diagnostic Management


studies imaging

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

 Secondary: pruritus recurrence


gallstone
migration

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 Small stones transiently Epigastric pain, ↑ WBC, ↑ MRCP/CT Delayed


pancreatitis obstructing pancreatic nausea/vomiting amylase/lipase, scan cholecystectomy
duct ↑ bilirubin, ALP

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

bowel through a nausea/vomiting) (cholecystectomy


cholecystoduodenal not performed in
fistula → obstruction the sam

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