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Query: UMLS:C0008325 (cholecystitis)
3,686 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors observed 6 patients, who developed acute cholecystitis at day 2--5 after the operation. In 3 patients, an operation on the abdominal organs was performed, in 3--the urologic intervention. The leading symptoms of postoperative cholecystitis are the following: epigastric pain, stable intestinal paresis, high body temperature. The authors recommend a wide use of the ultrasound investigation of the abdominal cavity, and in its negative results, or in absence of the apparatus--laparoscopy. All the patients were reoperated. One patient died.
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PMID:[Acute cholecystitis in the early postoperative period]. 188 Oct 83

99mTc-HMPAO labeled leukocyte scanning was performed on 38 patients with clinically suspected acute cholecystitis (AC) to evaluate its diagnostic value. The typical finding was an increasing accumulation of the tracer in the gallbladder wall in a 4 hour series of scintigrams. Leukocyte scan was positive in 16 of 17 patients with surgically and histologically confirmed AC. There were no false-positive findings. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of scintigraphy were 94, 100, and 96%, respectively. In 2 patients with acute acalculous cholecystitis true-positive findings were observed. Scintigraphy with 99mTc-HMPAO labeled leukocytes is a valuable new imaging method in AC.
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PMID:Scintigraphy with 99mTc-HMPAO labeled leukocytes in acute cholecystitis. 191 Sep 87

A patient's clinical presentation should prompt an imaging evaluation that is cost effective for accurate diagnosis and leads to appropriate treatment of gallbladder inflammatory disease. In the setting of recurrent biliary colic, chronic cholecystitis is the main diagnostic consideration. Imaging hallmarks include gallstones and gallbladder wall thickening for which ultrasonography is uniquely suited. When a patient appears more toxic with right upper quadrant pain, one would more strongly consider acute cholecystitis. Because the morbidity and mortality of acute cholecystitis are reduced with early cholecystectomy, it is incumbent upon the clinician to make the diagnosis promptly and accurately. Hepatobiliary imaging with an IDA derivative has proven superior sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for this condition. The examination has validity because it detects cystic duct obstruction, the primary pathophysiologic event responsible for most acute calculous and acalculous disease. Utilizing morphine augmentation when delayed filling is present has reduced the total examination time to less than 2 hours. Use of ancillary findings including gallbladder hyperemia and the "hot rim" sign help predict complicated cholecystitis, enabling more urgent intervention. The bulk of data presented in this review supports hepatobiliary imaging as the modality of first choice in the evaluation of acute cholecystitis. In the intensive care setting, where acalculous disease and atypical presentations are common, hepatobiliary imaging also plays a major role. We recommend liberal use of Sincalide pretreatment, morphine augmentation, and delayed images to promote gallbladder filling. If the gallbladder is nonvisualizing despite these maneuvers, sonography is often added as an aid to detect secondary signs of acute cholecystitis and help confirm the diagnosis with greater certainty prior to high-risk surgery.
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PMID:Hepatobiliary imaging. 191 52

To evaluate the likelihood that patients can be discharged from the hospital the day after open cholecystectomy, a prospective study of 500 consecutive patients undergoing cholecystectomy was undertaken. The study group included patients with associated acute and gangrenous cholecystitis, biliary pancreatitis and choledocholithiasis as well as those with diabetes, hypertension and obesity. Approximately one-fourth of the total group were discharged within 24 hours and over one-half in 48 hours. There was a significant correlation between advancing age and increasing length of stay. Almost one-half of the patients less than 35 years of age without acute or complicated disease were discharged within 24 hours, more than 80 per cent within 48 hours, and the mean length of postoperative stay (MLS) for these patients was 1.9 days. The presence of choledocholithiasis and fever greater than 101 degrees F. increased MLS, while acute cholecystitis, hyperamylasemia and leukocytosis did not. Early discharge from the hospital after open cholecystectomy, even in sick patients, is safe and cost-effective.
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PMID:Twenty-four hour hospitalization after cholecystectomy. 194 86

Personal experience in the treatment of acute cholecystitis with percutaneous cholecystostomy in high risk patients and in elderly patients is reported. Between January 1989 and November 1990, 28 patients affected by acute cholecystitis were treated with percutaneous cholecystostomy at Emergency Surgery Department, Verona University Hospital. The patients treated included 13 men and 15 women; 8 of them were under 70 years old, 5 between 70th and 75th and the remaining patients over 75 years old. The suspected clinical diagnosis of acute cholecystitis was confirmed in all cases by ultrasonography (accuracy 95.4%). The percutaneous cholecystostomy was successful in 26 over 28 cases. In all these cases patients had a sudden improvement of their clinical conditions. In one case we failed because the guide-wire slipped out of the gallbladder and we couldn't perform a second attempt for the patient's refuse; in an other case there was the dislodgment of the catheter after less than 12 hours from the cholecystostomy and the patient was operated on. Twenty-two of 26 patients whose conditions were improved by percutaneous cholecystostomy, subsequently underwent elective cholecystectomy. In 2 cases of acalculous cholecystitis the patients did not undergo the operation; in 2 cases because of the elderly age of the patients and their bad cardiorespiratory conditions we preferred not to perform the operation. We had not major complications; 6 patients complained pain irradiating to right shoulder which disappeared within 30-60 minutes from the end of the procedure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The role of echo-guided percutaneous cholecystectomy in acute cholecystitis]. 195

On the day of operation for acute destructive cholecystitis functions of external ventilation prove to be disturbed due to deterioration of pulmonary blood flow (2-6 times) and ventilation (1.3-3 times). The degree of these disturbances are in direct dependence on the degree of the inflammatory process in gallbladder and time of preoperative observation. At the same terms after emergency cholecystectomy the lung functions were reestablished considerably quicker and was more valuable than after operations on urgent indications. Inclusion of adrenoblocking agents into conservative treatment of acute cholecystitis before and after operation facilitates more effective and quicker recovery of lung functions.
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PMID:[Disorders and correction of lung functions in acute destructive cholecystitis]. 198 42

Sonographic identification of thickening of the gallbladder wall that consists of multiple striations (alternate hypoechoic and hyperechoic layers) has been considered strong evidence of the presence of acute cholecystitis. We studied 27 patients in whom sonograms showed striated thickening of the gallbladder wall to determine the diagnostic significance of this finding. Striations were classified as focal or diffuse. Sonograms were correlated with pathologic findings in 16 patients and with clinical diagnoses and laboratory findings in 11. Patients were categorized as having cholecystitis with or without gangrene or edema of the gallbladder wall unrelated to gallbladder disease. Striated thickening of the gallbladder wall was due to cholecystitis in 10 patients, and all 10 had gangrenous changes at surgery or at pathologic examination. Striations were focal in eight of these patients and diffuse in two. Striated thickening of the gallbladder wall was due to edema of the wall unrelated to gallbladder disease in 17 patients. Causes included congestive heart failure (n = 4), renal failure (n = 5), liver disease (hepatic failure [n = 1], hepatitis [n = 6]), ascites (n = 2), hypoalbuminemia (n = 3), pancreatitis (n = 1), blockage of the lymphatic/venous drainage of the gallbladder (n = 2), and prominent Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses (n = 1). More than one abnormality was present in five patients. Striations were focal in 11 of these patients and diffuse in six. The sonographic finding of striated gallbladder wall thickening is no more specific for cholecystitis than the observation of gallbladder wall thickening by itself, and it may occur in a variety of diseases. However, in the clinical setting of acute cholecystitis, the presence of striations suggests gangrenous changes in the gallbladder. The extent of the striations (focal or diffuse) is not useful in predicting the cause of the striated gallbladder wall thickening.
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PMID:Sonography of the gallbladder: significance of striated (layered) thickening of the gallbladder wall. 201 56

Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) has been reported to be a safe and relatively effective non-invasive treatment for radiolucent gallbladder calculi in selected patients. Ideally, the goal of successful treatment is the passage of all fragments from the gallbladder into the intestinal tract. Biliary colic has been reported in up to 35% of treated patients, although complications such as cholecystitis, cholangitis, common bile duct obstruction, and pancreatitis are surprisingly infrequent. Cholescintigraphy is the procedure of choice in patients with biliary colic and suspected acute cholecystitis. It has proven to be more sensitive than ultrasound in detecting acute common bile duct (CBD) obstruction, since functional obstruction precedes morphologic dilatation of the CBD. This report reviews two cases of post-lithotripsy cystic and common duct obstruction and discusses the role of Tc-DISIDA scintigraphy following gallstone ESWL.
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PMID:Biliary complications of gallstone lithotripsy detected by Tc-99m DISIDA scintigraphy. 203 26

Clinical examination of 34 patients showed that lymphotropic administration of antibiotics creates concentrations in organs and tissues involved in the inflammatory process in acute cholecystitis which are 1.63-14.95 times higher than those produced by intramuscular injection. Study of the course of the clinical picture of the disease in 122 patients with acute destructive cholecystitis revealed the high efficacy of this method of antibiotic therapy: the laboratory indices of the inflammation became normal within a shorter period of time, the inflammatory process in the gallbladder was arrested more rapidly, the number of postoperative complications fell 2.6 times, and the terms of hospital-stay of the patients reduced by 1.3 times. Lymphotropic antibiotic therapy is more pathogenetic in the management of acute destructive cholecystitis.
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PMID:[Intralymphatic antibacterial therapy of acute cholecystitis]. 204 42

The conservative treatment in the cases of primary attack of acute calculous cholecystitis is not effective, this is one of the results of the analysis made on the basis of the experience of thirty years and treatment of 3520 patients with acute cholecystitis. Thus, 90% of such acute attacks turn into chronic, and frequently into relapse forms, besides this 75% of patients get complicated forms of illness already in the first year of treatment. Active surgical and medical tactics give the possibility to reduce the postoperative lethality by 6 times and the number of postoperative complications by more than 2.5 times.
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PMID:[The surgical procedure in acute calculous cholecystitis]. 204


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