Cholecystitis Flashcards
Define cholecystitis.
Acute cholecystitis is acute gallbladder inflammation, and is one of the major complications of cholelithiasis (the presence of gallstones).
In most cases (90%), acute cholecystitis is caused by complete cystic duct obstruction due to an impacted gallstone in the gallbladder neck or cystic duct, which leads to inflammation within the gallbladder wall
What is the name for gallstone formation?
Cholelithiasis
How common are gallstones?
Cholelithiasis occurs in 10-15% of people and only 1-2% becomes symptomatic each year. Only 10% of those patients get acute cholecystitis.
3 times more common in women than in men up to the age of 50yrs then 1.5 times more common
What is acute acalculous cholesystitis and what percentage of cases are made up by it ?
Acute acalculous cholecystitis (inflammation of the gallbladder without any sign of gallstones) accounts for 5% to 14% of cases of acute cholecystitis
Most common in critically ill patients over 65yrs.
Describe the pathophysiology of acute cholecystitis.
- Fixed obstrcution of gallstones into gallbladder neck/cystic duct –> acute inflammation of gallbladder wall
- Gallstone causes bile to become trapped in the gallbladder –> irritation and increased pressure
- Trauma by gallstone –> inflammatory response
- Secondary bacterial infection can lead to necrosis and gallbladder perforation
What is Mirizzi’s syndrome?
Mirizzi syndrome is defined as common hepatic duct obstruction caused by extrinsic compression from an impacted stone in the cystic duct or infundibulum of the gallbladder. Jaundice in 10% of acute cholecystitis caused by Mirizzi’s syndrome.
How can cholecystitis be classified?
BY TYPE:
- Calculous - 90-95%
- Acalculous - 3-14%
BY PATHOLOGY:
- Oedematous - 2-4days and oedema is ubserosal layer
- Necrotising - 3-5days, oedema with areas of haemorrhage and necrosis(not all layers)
- Suppurative - 7-10days, WBCs within wall, areas of necrosis and suppuration, intra-wall abscesses involving entire thickness of wall. Pericholecystic abscesses present.
- Chronic - after repeated mild attacks, mucosal atrophy and fibrosis of gallbladder wall
- Emphysematous - air in gallbladder wall due to infection with gas forming anaerobes and often in diabetic patients.
What are the clinical features of cholecystitis?
Sudden-onset, constant, severe pain in the upper right quadrant, lasting several hours + tenderness with or without guarding
- RUQ pain - may begin in epigastrium or LUQ and move to the right subcostal region. Most often occurs after eating a fatty meal. Lasts more than 3-6 hours and is severe and steady
- Palpable mass (30-40%)
- Murphy’s sign - palpation causes inspiratory arrest due to pain
- Right shoulder pain
- Anorexia
- Nausea and vomiting
- Fever and chills - seen in complicated disease
Acalculous - difficult to diagnose; often in critically ill on TPN, but usually diagnosis of exclusion.
Where is pain from the gallbladder referred?
Right shoulder
What are the risk factors for cholecystitis?
- Gallstones
- Severe illness
- TPN
- Diabetes
- Physical inactivity
- Low fibre diet
- Trauma/severe burns/infection
- Hepatic arterial embolisation
- Medication- ceftriaxone(secreted into bile), ciclosporin(reduces bile acide secretion)
Why does TPN lead to cholecystitis?
Fasting –> gallbladder hypomobility –> stasis, sludge formation and gallstones due to reduced emptying
Toxic agents build up in gallbladder lumen causing gallbladder mucosa damage
What are the first line investigations for cholecystitis?
Bloods:
- FBC (elevated WBC), LFTs (elevated ALP, GGT and Bil), CRP (elevated >28nmol/L)
Scans:
- RUQ US (fluid around gallbladder, distended gallbladder, thickened wall, positive sonographic Murphy’s sign, gallstones)
- Abdo CT/MRI (gallbladder wall inflammation; linear high-density areas in pericholecystic fat tissue)
How do you manage a patient with cholecystitis?
Diagnosis and simultaneous resuscitation
- Analgesia e.g. paracetamol or diclofenac
- Monitoring
- Fluids
Assess severity - Tokyo guideline grading
Sepsis bundle - take cultures + start antibiotics (ampicillin/cirpofloxacin +/- metronidazole)
Exclusion of CBD stones - ERCP if present
Plan for cholecystectomy - if within 72hrs of symptom onset then do immediate cholecystectomy as not enough time has passed for adhesions/inflammation to occur
If high risk patient unsuitable for GA: percutaneous cholecytostomy to relieve symptoms
What are the complications of cholecystitis and its management?
- Necrosis of the gallbladder wall (gangrenous cholecystitis).
- Perforation of the gallbladder.
- Biliary peritonitis.
- Pericholecystic abscess.
- Fistula (between the gallbladder and duodenum).
- Jaundice (due to inflammation of adjoining biliary ducts — Mirizzi’s syndrome).
- Sepsis.
What is the prognosis for cholecystitis?
If the gallbladder perforates, mortality is 30%.
Untreated acute acalculous cholecystitis is life-threatening and is associated with up to 50% mortality.
About 50% of the people who have had one episode of biliary pain will have another within 12 months.
Without treatment, acute cholecystitis may resolve spontaneously within 1–7 days. However, 25–30% of people will require surgery or develop complications.