Cholelithiasis, Cholecystitis and Pancreatitis Flashcards

1
Q

Contents of bile and its purpose?

A

Contents:

  • Water
  • Bile acids
  • Bilirubin
  • Cholesterol
  • Excreted hormones and drugs

Function - digestion of fats and excretion of bilirubin, cholesterol and xenobiotics.

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2
Q

How are types of cholelithiasis classified?

What are the types?

A

Classified based on constituents of the stone:

Cholesterol

  • Cholesterol monohydrate
  • Yellowy colour

Pigment stones

  • Black - Unconjugated bilirubin + calcium = calcium bilirubinate
  • Brown - Lipids, calcium salts of fatty acids, bilirubin, cholesterol
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3
Q

Pathogenesis of cholesterol stone?

What conditions increase this risk? (4)

A

Bile cholesterol concentration becomes supersaturated, causing choletserol to form cholesterol monohydrate crystals.

Four conditions:

  • Supersaturation of cholesterol
  • Hypomotility of gall bladder
  • Choletserol nucleation
  • Hypersecretion of mucous that traps cholesterol crystals
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4
Q

Pathogenesis of black pigment gall stone?

A

Disorders that lead to elevated levels of bilirubin.

Unconjugated bilirubin combines with calcium to form calcium bilirubinate.

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5
Q

Consequences of a bile stone?

A

80% of patients remain asymptomatic.

Consequences:

  • Biliary colic
  • Increased risk of carcinoma
  • Cholecystitis
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6
Q

How is cholecystitis classed?

A

Acute or chronic, calculous or acalculous. (4 types)

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7
Q

Presentation of acute cholecystitis?

A
  • RUQ pain
  • Fever
  • Murphy’s sign
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8
Q

Cause of acute calculous and acute acalculous cholecystitis?

A

Acute calculous - gallstone obstruction of neck or cystic duct

Acute acalculous - associated with pre-existing conditions e.g. trauma, sepsis, surgery.

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9
Q

Mechanism of complications of acute cholecystititis?

A

Bile stasis and increased viscosity results in obstruction, mucosal ischaemia, pre-disposition to infection.

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10
Q

Treatment of cholecystitis?

A
  • Nil by mouth
  • Pain relief
  • Prompt surgery
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11
Q

Prevalence of calculous vs acalculous chronic cholecystitis and its presentation?

A

90% calculous, 10% acalculous

Presents with RUQ pain, precipitated by food.

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12
Q

Aetiology of acute pancreatitis

A
  • Alcoholism
  • Gall stone, tumour → obsturctiion
  • Vasculitis
  • Mumps
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13
Q

Mechanism of acute pancreatitis complications?

A
  1. Pancreatic duct obstruction
  2. Acninar cell injury from alcohol

Leads to two bad consequences:

  • Autodigestion of pancreas due to inappropriately released enzymes
  • Fat necrosis - release of fatty acids bind calcium/magnesium to form insoluble soaps, causing fat necrosis.
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14
Q

Macroscopic morphological differences between acute and chronic pancreatitis?

A

Acute pancreatitis:

  • Swollen
  • Haemorrhagic
  • Fat necrosis

Chronic pancreatitis

  • Shrunken
  • Hard
  • Pale due to fibrosis and calcification
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15
Q

Pathogenesis of chronic pancreatitis?

A

Acinar compartments are replaced by fibrosis, leading to exocrine insufficiency and endocrine parenchymal destruction

Caused by long term alcohol misuse:

  • Alcohol increases protein concentration in pancreatic fluid - plug up pancreatic ducts
  • Alcohol damages acinar cells
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