Cholelithiasis, Cholecystitis and Pancreatitis Flashcards
Contents of bile and its purpose?
Contents:
- Water
- Bile acids
- Bilirubin
- Cholesterol
- Excreted hormones and drugs
Function - digestion of fats and excretion of bilirubin, cholesterol and xenobiotics.
How are types of cholelithiasis classified?
What are the types?
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
Pathogenesis of cholesterol stone?
What conditions increase this risk? (4)
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
Pathogenesis of black pigment gall stone?
Disorders that lead to elevated levels of bilirubin.
Unconjugated bilirubin combines with calcium to form calcium bilirubinate.
Consequences of a bile stone?
80% of patients remain asymptomatic.
Consequences:
- Biliary colic
- Increased risk of carcinoma
- Cholecystitis
How is cholecystitis classed?
Acute or chronic, calculous or acalculous. (4 types)
Presentation of acute cholecystitis?
- RUQ pain
- Fever
- Murphy’s sign
Cause of acute calculous and acute acalculous cholecystitis?
Acute calculous - gallstone obstruction of neck or cystic duct
Acute acalculous - associated with pre-existing conditions e.g. trauma, sepsis, surgery.
Mechanism of complications of acute cholecystititis?
Bile stasis and increased viscosity results in obstruction, mucosal ischaemia, pre-disposition to infection.
Treatment of cholecystitis?
- Nil by mouth
- Pain relief
- Prompt surgery
Prevalence of calculous vs acalculous chronic cholecystitis and its presentation?
90% calculous, 10% acalculous
Presents with RUQ pain, precipitated by food.
Aetiology of acute pancreatitis
- Alcoholism
- Gall stone, tumour → obsturctiion
- Vasculitis
- Mumps
Mechanism of acute pancreatitis complications?
- Pancreatic duct obstruction
- 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.
Macroscopic morphological differences between acute and chronic pancreatitis?
Acute pancreatitis:
- Swollen
- Haemorrhagic
- Fat necrosis
Chronic pancreatitis
- Shrunken
- Hard
- Pale due to fibrosis and calcification
Pathogenesis of chronic pancreatitis?
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