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Query: UMLS:C0149520 (acute cholecystitis)
2,784 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This paper assesses the value of hepatobiliary scanning and surgical treatment of acute cholecystitis in patients above the age of 60 years over a 3 year period (1980-1982). During this period 382 cholecystectomies for biliary disease were performed in 257 women and 125 men with mean ages of 55 X 6 and 61 X 1 years respectively. Of the 382, 208 were older than 60, with a female to male ratio of 1 . 3:1. Acute cholecystitis occurred in 74 of the 208 patients; they were subjected to early cholecystectomy. Biliary tract imaging using 99 m technetium-labelled diisopropyl-IDA (DISIDA) proved valuable in confirming the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. Of 85 patients over 60 years who underwent hepatobiliary scanning with a presumptive diagnosis of acute cholecystitis, 74 had positive scans and acute cholecystitis was confirmed at subsequent operation in these cases. There were two false positive and nine negative scans showing that biliary scintigraphy proved to be a rapid non-invasive and sensitive method of diagnosing acute cholecystitis. The advent of hepatobiliary scanning has strengthened our surgical strategy in the management of acute cholecystitis in the elderly and allows early elective surgery with an acceptable morbidity and in this series no mortality.
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PMID:The management of acute cholecystitis in the elderly. 654 Oct 69

Hepatobiliary imaging with the various technetium-labeled IDA compounds is more than 90% sensitive and specific for the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. Causes of false-positive studies include chronic cholecystitis, cystic-duct obstruction by tumor, prolonged fasting, the nonfasting state, pancreatitis, alcoholism, parenteral hyperalimentation, and severe intercurrent illness. A case of congenital absence of the gallbladder is submitted as another cause of a false-positive scan.
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PMID:Congenital absence of the gallbladder: another cause of false-positive hepatobiliary image. 672 25

Acute cholecystitis is a relatively common clinical entity characterized histopathologically by obstruction of the cystic duct due to either edema or stone or both. Thorough clinical assessment and selection of the appropriate diagnostic tests are crucial in making an early diagnosis before surgical treatment. Many diagnostic tests are available for imaging the gallbladder. Hepatobiliary imaging using technetium Tc 99m IDA is the test of choice to either exclude or confirm the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis and it carries a discriminating power greater than that of cholecystography or ultrasonography. In most patients the exclusion of the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis can be made as early as 30 minutes and the confirmation within three hours. The confirmation of acute cholecystitis by radionuclide imaging obviates the need for either cholecystography or ultrasonography.
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PMID:Acute cholecystitis: the diagnostic role for current imaging tests. 675 44

In 91 patients (36 men, 55 women) who were hospitalized with symptoms of acute cholecystitis, cholescintigraphy was performed with 99m-Tc-ethyl-IDA, in order to evaluate the method in the diagnosis of acute inflammatory disease of the gallbladder. Five groups of patients were recognized: (A) abnormal scintigraphy and verified gallbladder disease, (B) abnormal scintigraphy without verified gallbladder disease (false positive). (C) normal cholescintigraphy but cholelithiasis (false negative), (D) normal cholescintigraphy and no gallbladder disease, and (E) cholescintigraphy in icteric patients. In the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis the sensitivity was 92% and the specificity was 88%. Cholescintigraphy is a useful method for proving or disproving a diagnosis of acute cholecystitis with non-patent cystic duct. It does not reveal calculi in biliary ducts or in a gallbladder with patent cystic duct. In icteric patients, cholescintigraphy has restricted usefulness at serum bilirubin level around 120 mumol or more.
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PMID:Cholescintigraphy: a valuable diagnostic method in acute cholecystitis. 688 May 54

Technetium-99m IDA cholescintigraphy has provided a new, noninvasive means of visualizing biliary tract function. It has become the procedure of choice in patients with suspected acute cholecystitis because of its ability to most accurately detect functional obstruction or patency of the cystic duct as opposed to ultrasound's ability to detect only anatomic changes such as the presence of calculi or a thickened gallbladder wall. These latter findings are more important in establishing the diagnosis of chronic cholecystitis where ultrasound shares a position of prime importance with the oral cholecystogram. Tc-99m IDA cholescintigraphy has also been particularly useful in evaluating bile leaks, biliary-enteric anastomosis patency and the post-cholecystectomy patient with recurrent pain. In the patient with cholestasis, ultrasound is usually the procedure of choice since it establishes whether or not ductal dilatation is present and frequently can determine the cause of obstruction. Cholescintigraphy has played an ancillary role in many cases by demonstrating the level of partial obstruction, but it does not have the anatomic resolution to visualize the cause of obstruction. Occasionally, in the evaluation of cholestasis, cholescintigraphy has proven to be the only modality which has identified the presence of acute common duct obstruction or localized intrahepatic ductal obstruction. All in all, Tc-99m IDA cholescintigraphy has had a dramatic impact upon hepatobiliary diagnosis.
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PMID:Role of 99mTc-IDA cholescintigraphy in evaluating biliary tract disorders. 699 26

Prospective analysis of the efficacy of 99mTc-IDA cholescintigraphy and cholecystosonography showed that both are excellent techniques for assessing patients with suspected acute cholecystitis (accuracy 84.7% and 88.1% respectively). Consequently, the choice of tests selected to evaluate patients with suspected acute cholecystitis depends on several factors including; (a.) quality of equipment available; (b.) capability of the technologist performing the examination; (c.) relative experience of the physician supervising the examination; and (d.) willingness of the surgical consultant to accept a positive examination as sufficient evidence to perform emergency surgery. The authors feel that cholecystosonography should be used to assess the presence of acute cholecystitis in jaundiced patients because of its capability in the assessment of bile duct dilatation, and because of the lower reliability of cholescintigraphy when bile duct obstruction is possible (i.e., in jaundice). Ancillary findings in cholecystosonography and cholescintigraphy can aid in the differential diagnosis of acute right upper quandrant pain syndromes.
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PMID:Prospective evaluation of 99mTc-IDA cholescintigraphy and gray-scale ultrasound in the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. 708 92

A case of pericholecystic hyperperfusion on Tc-99m sulfur colloid (SC) flow images with a pericholecystic rim of increased activity (PCHA) on delayed planar and single-photon emission computed tomography images of the liver was seen in a patient with a history of multiple renal transplants admitted with cramping right lower quadrant abdominal pain. Laparotomy performed 5 days after the scan revealed an acutely perforated gangrenous gallbladder and occluded cystic duct. The secondary findings of gallbladder hyperperfusion and PCHA or "rim sign" have been frequently reported with Tc-99m IDA hepatobiliary imaging. These secondary findings in conjunction with a nonvisualized gallbladder on an IDA scan suggest a complicated or advanced stage of acute cholecystitis and usually require urgent surgical intervention. The rim sign on Tc-99m SC scintigraphy also likely indicates the same grave diagnosis.
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PMID:Rim sign in Tc-99m sulfur colloid hepatic scintigraphy. 1576 94

Hepatobiliary scintigraphy evaluates the biliary clearance of Tc-99m-labeled iminodiacetic acid agents (Tc-99m IDA) and has a high sensitivity and specificity for the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. False-negative studies are extremely rare. We describe an apparently normal nonmorphine-augmented hepatobiliary study in gangrenous acalculous cholecystitis. Based on clinical findings, computed tomography, and ultrasound demonstration of a dilated gallbladder, a cholecystectomy was performed. Pathologic examination of the gallbladder revealed acute gangrenous cholecystitis with culture positive for Klebsiella pneumoniae.
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PMID:Scintigraphic gallbladder visualization with gangrenous acalculous cholecystitis. 1705 89


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