Diferencia entre revisiones de «Acute calculous cholecystitis»
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| Línea 46: | Línea 46: | ||
##Ultrasound report may mistake GB wall gas for bowel gas | ##Ultrasound report may mistake GB wall gas for bowel gas | ||
##Mortality as high as 15% due to gangrene or perforation | ##Mortality as high as 15% due to gangrene or perforation | ||
#Mirizzi Syndrome | |||
##Partial obstruction of common hepatic duct due to stone impaction / chronic inflammation | |||
##Symptoms of acute cholecystitis + dilated intrahepatic ducts + jaundice | |||
##Inflammation can cause erosive fistula from Hartmann pouch into common hepatic duct | |||
###US and CT can usually delineate the fistula | |||
##Treatment = open cholecystectomy | |||
#Gallstone Ileus | |||
##Bowel obstruction due to impactio nof gallstone at terminal ileum | |||
###Gallstone enters small bowel through biliary-duodenal fistula | |||
##Diagnosis suggested by pneumobilia, bowel obstruction, ectopic gallstone | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Gallbladder Disease (Main)]] | *[[Gallbladder Disease (Main)]] | ||
Revisión del 04:39 1 ago 2011
Clinical Features
- Upper abdominal pain (esp RUQ)
- Not necessarily related to meals or fatty food intolerance
- N/V, fever
Diagnosis
- Local Signs
- RUQ tenderness
- Murphy Sign
- Highest positive LR of any clinical finding or lab value
- Sysemtic signs
- Fever
- Leukocytosis
- Imaging
- Ultrasound: Gallbladder
- GB wall thickening (>3mm)
- May also be seen w/ pancreatitis, ascites, heart failure, alcoholic hepatitis
- Pericholecystic fluid
- Sonographic Murphy's Sign (PPV 92%)
- May be absent in pts w/ DM, gangrenous cholecystitis
- GB wall thickening (>3mm)
- CT
- Useful when US results are equivocal
- Ultrasound: Gallbladder
Treatment
- Antibiotics
- Although clear evidence is lacking, assoc/ w/ decreased wnd infection and bacteremia
- CTX + metronidazole OR piperacillin/tazobactam OR ampicillin-sulbactam
- Bacteria: Gm negative (75%), gm positive (15%), anaerobes (8%)
Disposition
- Admit
Complications
- Gangrene
- Occurs in 20% if untreated (esp. diabetics, elderly, delay in seeking care)
- Consider if pt presents with sepsis in addition to cholecystitis
- Perforation
- Occurs in 2% after development of gangrene
- Usually localized, leading to pericholecystic abscess
- Gallstone Ileus
- Due to cholecystoenteric fistula
- Emphysematous cholecystitis
- Due to secondary infection of GB by gas-forming organisms (C. perfringens)
- Presents like cholecystitis but often progresses to sepsis and gangrene
- IV abx and cholecystectomy are essential
- Ultrasound report may mistake GB wall gas for bowel gas
- Mortality as high as 15% due to gangrene or perforation
- Mirizzi Syndrome
- Partial obstruction of common hepatic duct due to stone impaction / chronic inflammation
- Symptoms of acute cholecystitis + dilated intrahepatic ducts + jaundice
- Inflammation can cause erosive fistula from Hartmann pouch into common hepatic duct
- US and CT can usually delineate the fistula
- Treatment = open cholecystectomy
- Gallstone Ileus
- Bowel obstruction due to impactio nof gallstone at terminal ileum
- Gallstone enters small bowel through biliary-duodenal fistula
- Diagnosis suggested by pneumobilia, bowel obstruction, ectopic gallstone
- Bowel obstruction due to impactio nof gallstone at terminal ileum
See Also
Source
- UpToDate
- Tintinalli
