Gallstones and Biliary Colic Flashcards
Define gall stones
Formation of stones (choleliths) in the gallbladder
Cholelithiasis – gallstones in the gallbladder
Choledocholithiasis – gallstones in the biliary tree
Define biliary colic
temporary obstruction of the cystic or bile duct with a gallstone
What are the causes/risk factors of gallstones?
Cholesterol gallstones (85-90%) • Family history • Increasing age • Female (3:1) • Obesity • Drugs e.g. OCP, octreotide • Pregnancy • TPN, rapid weight loss (bile stasis) • Terminal ileum disease (interrupted enterohepatic circulation) • (Female, forty, fat, fertile, fair)
Pigment gallstones (<15%) – calcium bilirubinate • Chronic haemolytic anaemia • Cirrhosis • Cystic fibrosis • Ileal disease • Bile duct strictures
What are the symptoms of gall stones?
• Asymptomatic (90%)
Biliary colic
• RUQ or epigastric pain (sudden onset, constant, severe, may radiate to R shoulder, after a fatty meal, lasts for hours)
• Nausea & vomiting
Cholecystitis
• RUQ or epigastric pain (prolonged,
may radiate to R shoulder)
• Fever
Cholangitis • Charcot’s triad - RUQ pain - Fever (rigors) - Jaundice (dark urine, pale stool, pruritus) • Reynold’s pentad - Hypotension/shock - Confusion
What are the signs of gallstones?
Biliary colic
• RUQ or epigastric tenderness
Cholecystitis • RUQ or epigastric tenderness/guarding • Murphy’s sign • Tachycardia • Pyrexia
Cholangitis
• RUQ tenderness
• Jaundice
• Pyrexia
What investigations are carried out for gallstones?
- FBC - normal in simple biliary colic
- serum LFTs - cholelithiasis: normal; choledocholithiasis: elevated alkaline phosphatase, elevated bilirubin
- serum lipase and amylase - elevated (>3 times upper limit of normal) in acute pancreatitis
- abdominal ultrasound- cholelithiasis: stones in the gallbladder; choledocholithiasis: stones in the bile duct with or without bile duct dilation
What is the management of gallstones?
ACUTE
symptomatic cholelithiasis
• 1st line -
cholecystectomy
choledocholithiasis with or without symptoms
• 1st line - endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)
• Adjunct - lithotripsy, papillary balloon dilation, or long-term biliary stenting
• 2nd line - laparoscopic common bile duct exploration
ONGOING
asymptomatic cholelithiasis
• 1st line - observation
What are the complications of gallstones?
- Cholecystitis (inflammation of the gallbladder)
- Blockage of the common bile duct
- Blockage of the pancreatic duct
- Gallbladder cancer