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Query: UMLS:C0149520 (
acute cholecystitis
)
2,784
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 45-year-old woman was admitted in July, 1976 with an
acute cholecystitis
without jaundice. She had suffered from hepatic
colic
without fever, jaundice, diarrhea or allergic episodes for the past 8 years. The physical examination only revealed an elective pain on the cystic point. Laboratory data were unremarkable, except for a 12 percent eosinophils. The cholecystogram showed a cholelithiasis. The lithiasis was confirmed during the surgical operation and a fasciolasis was diagnosed after one and 10-12 parasites had been found into the cystic and common bile duct, respectively. A cholecistectomy and choledochoduodenostomy were performed. The patient was treated with 60 mg dehydroemetine during 10 days and 500 mg chloroquine during the other next 10 days. Eggs of Fasciola hepatica were found in the stool culture. The follow-up examinations 3 months and a year after surgery were completely normal. The national literature on this topic is reviewed and the clinical manifestations and therapy of this disease are commented on.
...
PMID:[Choledochal obstruction due to Fasciola hepatica (author's transl)]. 4 37
In the period from 1963 til 1978 the authors observed 1084 patients with cholecystitis. Operations were performed on 336 patients.
Acute cholecystitis
was diagnosed in 190 patients, chronic calculous cholecystitis--in 128 patients, chronic acalculous cholecystitis--in 18 cases. In
acute cholecystitis
the active-temporizing tactics was used. Urgent operations were performed on patients with peritonitis. In other variants the conservative treatment was prescribed. When the patient's condition was stated to improve, the surgical treatment was performed if indicated. Patients with chronic calculous cholecystitis were operated on diagnosing. Chronic acalculous cholecystitis was an indication for surgery in cases of frequent attacks of hepatic
colic
and inefficiency of the conservative therapy.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of cholecystitis]. 51 74
It is recommended that elective cholecystectomy for cholelithiasis be performed right away after the first
colic
. This decreases the operative mortality to 0.3-1.0%. 2. The occurrence of local complications leads to a ten-fold increase in mortality. 3. Patients with gallstones but without symptoms should be operated during their 5th decade of life because half of these patients will later on develop serious symptoms and 25% even critical local complications requiring surgery. Operative mortality in the old age group, however, is considerably higher at 7-20%. 4. The
acute cholecystitis
should nowadays be treated by surgeons because early operation usually results in an operative mortality of as low as 1-1.5%. 5. The postoperative treatment of choice for residual common duct stones is either chemical dissolution via the T-tube extraction via the T-tube canal or endoscopic retrograde extraction of the stone after papillotomy. A reoperation is indicated only in the rare event that these methods should fail.
...
PMID:[Therapy for cholelithiasis]. 63 12
In approximately 80 per cent of cases the gallbladder is closely applied to the superior medial aspect of the right
colic
flexure. This intimate anatomic relationship provides pathways for direct extension of both inflammatory and neoplastic lesions of the gallbladder to involve the adjacent colon. The resultant secondary colonic abnormalities noted in 15 patients have been analyzed and correlated with surgical-pathologic findings. In
acute cholecystitis
, barium enema examination shows evidence of indentation by an enlarged gallbladder, spasm and mucosal edema in the anterior hepatic flexure. Chronic cholecystitis results in involvement of the adjacent colon by fibrous adhesions and inflammatory reaction. These may further lead to the development of pseudotumors simulating primary carcinoma of the colon. Similar findings including cholecysto-
colic
fistulae may be the initial manifestations of carcinoma of the gallbladder. The spectrum of pathologic-roentgenographic alterations in the cholecysto-
colic
interface is described and illustrated. Recognition of these features is of critical importance for the correct interpretation of barium enema findings and the subsequent management of patients with gallbladder disorders.
...
PMID:The cholecysto-colic relationships. A roentgen-anatomic study of the colonic manifestations of gallbladder disorders. 120 Feb 12
During a period of 13 weeks, 45 patients with symptom-producing gall bladder stones (attacks of gall stone
colic
n = 39 (87%);
acute cholecystitis
n = 6 (13%)), corresponding to approximately 85% of the total number of gall bladder stone patients during the period were selected for laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Two patients had previously undergone upper abdominal operations and had adhesions and one patient suffered from cirrhosis of the liver with portal hypertension. It proved necessary to convert five of the laparoscopic cholecystectomies to open cholecystectomies (11%) on account of technical difficulties (severe acute changes due to cholecystitis (n = 3), indeterminable anatomical conditions (n = 1) and one case of liver metastases (n = 1)). The median duration of operation was 90 minutes with a range from 30 to 360 minutes. Peroperative cholangiography was not undertaken routinely. No cases of forgotten stones in the common bile duct occurred. No deaths occurred and, in all, three slight complications occurred (7%): two patients had haematoma in the abdominal wall and one patient minimal leakage of bile from the stump of the gall bladder on account of insufficient ligation of the cystic duct. This patient was treated with an endoscopically placed drain in the common bile duct for two weeks, after which she was well. No lesions of the common bile duct occurred. None of the complications required laparotomy. The median duration of hospitalization was 24 hours with a range from one to 14 days. All of the patients were at work or could manage their usual activities after 14 days. The median duration of sick leave was seven days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The first 45 operations]. 183 52
In the first year from October 1990 since starting the procedure 65 laparoscopic cholecystectomies were carried out on one surgical service. There were 4 planned open cholecystectomies and 8 laparoscopic procedures converted during the same period: 7 of these were in the first 3 months with only 1 of the last 53 being opened. Surgery was carried out during the same admission in 22 patients presenting as emergencies:
acute cholecystitis
(9),
colic
(6), pancreatitis (3), jaundice (4). Two patients had later laparotomies for complications; one patient bled from the umbilical stab and with ongoing peritonism had a pelvic haematoma drained on day 5 and a second was opened following a bile leak caused by a displaced cystic duct clip--both recovered uneventfully. Peroperative cholangiography was performed in 13 patients; 2 were positive (15%) and had ERCP papillotomy 3 days post op without complication. One patient who presented with pancreatitis had ERCP performed post-op without incident. Seven patients had laparoscopic cholecystectomy following papillotomy for common duct stones. The gallbladder was extracted per umbilicus in 45 (3 wound infections) and per right subcostal stab in 20 (no infections). Mean hospital stay was 48 hours (1-4 days) in uncomplicated cases. In conclusion, the learning curve is associated with higher conversion rates. Extraction through pliable hypochondrial muscles is easier and may be safer and less traumatic. Perioperative endoscopic papillotomy is safe and effective for choledochal stones.
...
PMID:Endoscopic management of common duct stones with laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 183 42
We prospectively performed nuclear biliary patency imaging (HIDA scanning) in 62 patients who had undergone endoscopic retrograde sphincterotomy for management of pancreaticobiliary disease with their gallbladders in situ. Elective cholecystectomy was not recommended because of advanced age, comorbidity, or absence of gallstones. All patients had patent cystic ducts at endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography balloon cholangiography. Eighteen (29.1%) of 62 patients had nonvisualizing HIDA scans, and in 44 (70.9%) of 62 visualization was normal or delayed. Six cholecystectomies were required for
colic
(n = 1),
acute cholecystitis
(n = 4), and acute cholecystocholedochal fistula with cholangitis (n = 1). Among the patients with cholelithiasis and nonvisualization (n = 13), five (38.5%) required surgery, whereas only one (4.8%) of 21 patients with cholelithiasis and visualization required surgery. Nonvisualizing HIDA scans are frequent (30%) after endoscopic retrograde sphincterotomy and have no clinical relevance in patients without cholelithiasis but predict the need for cholecystectomy within 16 months in 38.5% of patients with cholelithiasis.
...
PMID:Biliary patency imaging after endoscopic retrograde sphincterotomy with gallbladder in situ. Clinical impact of nonvisualization. 203 61
Five cases of surgical intervention following extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) of gallbladder and bile duct stones are reported. This represents an incidence of surgical intervention in 1% of patients with gallbladder stones and in 9% of patients with common bile duct stones who underwent ESWL during a two-and-a-half-year investigation period. There was no mortality. In 2 patients with gallbladder stones and persistent
colic
after ESWL, elective cholecystectomy was performed. There was no evidence of macroscopic or microscopic damage or bleeding within the wall of the gallbladder. Furthermore, no damage to the liver, common bile duct, duodenum, or stomach was noted. ESWL was applied in 34 patients with common bile duct stones in whom endoscopic sphincterotomy and stone extraction had proved ineffective. Three (9%) of these patients required surgery. In 1 patient, a Dormia basket got stuck and the basket, together with the stone, were removed by choledochotomy. In a second patient, rupture of a juxtapapillary diverticulum occurred 10 days after ESWL and 2 days after endoscopic extraction of stone fragments. At laparotomy, the retroperitoneum was drained. In a third patient with gallbladder and common bile duct stones,
acute cholecystitis
developed after lithotripsy of common bile duct stones. Cholecystectomy was performed and a t-tube was inserted in the bile duct. In all patients, the postoperative course was uneventful. In our experience, ESWL is a safe procedure with no mortality and an infrequent need for surgical intervention.
...
PMID:Surgical intervention following fragmentation of gallstones by extracorporeal shock waves. 238 58
A 29-year-old patient was admitted with acute abdomen in the 17th week of pregnancy. History revealed two episodes of
colic
in the right hypochondriac area during the previous six months, but no other abdominal complaints. Clinically the picture was that of
acute cholecystitis
. Laboratory findings included an elevated white cell count, a slight elevation of serum transaminases and a marked increase of serum alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin. Echographically there were dilated intra- and extrahepatic bile ducts containing two hyperechogenic elements without casting an acoustic shadow. A hydrops of the gallbladder with sludge and a thickening of the wall could also been seen. Because of pregnancy an ERCP could not be performed due to the need for X-ray, so we had to resort to open surgery. Under tocolytic and antibiotic shielding we carried out open cholecystectomy and choledochoscopic exploration of the common bile duct. Using a Fogarty balloon catheter we extracted two live, adult liver flukes and placed a T-tube in the duct. Because of positive fecal probes for fasciola eggs the T-tube had to be left in place until childbirth. Afterwards we performed a pre-cut-papillotomy by ERCP and took the T-tube out, having confirmed a clear duct on a T-tube-cholangiogram. With negative fecal probes and the eosinophilia on the white cell count returning to normal, we decided against the planned chemotherapy and assumed self-healing of the disease. The patient has been well since.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Fasciola hepatica--a unusual cause of acute cholecystitis with cholestatic jaundice]. 748 18
A retrospective analysis was done of 88 cases of laparoscopic cholecystectomy performed by the first author from November 1990 to March 1992 at the Toa Payoh Hospital. There were 61 female and 27 male patients; the average age was 47.1 years. The most common presenting symptom was biliary colic (85.3%), followed by
acute cholecystitis
(10.2%) and gallstone pancreatitis (4.5%). In the vast majority of patients, the diagnosis was established by ultrasound (96.6%) while the remainder was diagnosed by oral cholecystography (3.4%). The operation was performed using the usual 4 puncture approach with the single-handed technique of dissection. Antibiotic prophylaxis with a broad-spectrum agent was used in all patients and there was no incidence of wound infection. A low complication rate of 4.5% was experienced--consisting of 1 case each of subcutaneous emphysema,
abdominal colic
, fever and bile duct injury. There was no mortality in our series. The conversion rate was 9.1% and this was due to our policy of performing laparotomy whenever the safety of laparoscopic surgery was in doubt. The mean duration of postoperative hospitalisation was 3 days and 7 days after laparoscopic and converted cholecystectomies respectively. The majority of patients (61.4%) returned to work after 2 weeks.
...
PMID:Experience with laparoscopic cholecystectomy at the Toa Payoh Hospital. 826 71
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