| 3. Noncalculous
Gallbladder Disease |
page
454 |
3.1 Congenital
Anomalies
Congenital abnormalities of
the gallbladder and biliary system result from embryonic maldevelopment
and are most interesting for the surgeon attempting to identify biliary
anatomy at cholecystectomy. Agenesis of the gallbladder is rare.
Curiously, it is associated with common duct stones.
| 3.2 Acalculous Cholecystitis |
page 454 |
3.2.1 ACUTE ACALCULOUS CHOLECYSTITIS
Inflammation of the
gallbladder can occur in the absence of gallstones. Though uncommon in
adults, acute acalculous cholecystitis may appear associated with AIDS,
pregnancy, trauma, burns, sepsis or following major surgery. In young
children, acute cholecystitis frequently occurs without gallstones and
follows a febrile illness, although no definite infectious agent is
identified. Biliary stagnation sometimes accompanied by sludge appears to
be a factor. Impaired blood flow to the gallbladder, coagulation factors
and prostaglandin may also have roles. Cytomegalovirus or Cryptosporidia
can cause gangrenous cholecystitis in AIDS.
Clinical presentation is
identical to that of acute cholecystitis, with pain, fever and abdominal
tenderness in the right upper quadrant. These features are often obscured
by the patient's underlying critical condition. Diagnosis is then revealed
at laparotomy, but sometimes can be determined preoperatively by
nonvisualization of the gallbladder on cholescintigraphy (although
nonvisualization is less sensitive here because of the prolonged fast many
are on) or by ultrasonographic evidence of a thickened gallbladder wall.
Perforation, gangrene and empyema are all too frequent complications. The
best treatment is prompt cholecystectomy. Prevention is possible in some
patients on complete TPN (no oral intake) following major surgery, trauma
or burns. Daily injections of cholecystokinin (CCK) can prevent sludge
formation and its complication, cholecystitis.
| 3.2.2 CHRONIC ACALCULOUS
CHOLECYSTITIS |
|
Recurrent biliary-type pain
in the absence of gallstones has been associated with rather modest
inflammation. The basis is presumed to be a motility disorder, impaired
gallbladder evacuation; hence the alternative term "biliary
dyskinesia." Relief can follow cholecystectomy. Difficulties arise in
attempting to make this diagnosis: the symptoms are often not clear-cut
(sometimes having features of the irritable bowel syndrome or nonulcer
dyspepsia), and there are no gallstones to detect. Abnormal gallbladder
evacuation in response to CCK may be evident on cholescintigraphy.
Sensitivity and specificity of these tests remain unclear. CCK infusion
alone can reproduce the biliary pain, but the value of this provocative
test is uncertain. The entity remains poorly defined. In some, the origin
of the problem is dysfunction of the sphincter of Oddi. In many, it may
represent one facet of the irritable bowel syndrome.
| 3.3 Cholecystoses |
page 455 |
Cholesterolosis
consists of deposits of cholesterol esters and triglycerides within the
gallbladder wall. These submucosal deposits produce a fine yellow
reticular pattern on a red background of mildly inflamed mucosa, providing
an appearance like a strawberry: hence the term "strawberry
gallbladder." Some of the cholesterol deposits protrude like polyps
and can be detected on ultrasound. There is no well-defined symptom
complex linked to this entity. Although frequently an incidental finding
at post mortem, it is sometimes associated with vague dyspeptic
complaints, the irritable bowel syndrome or recurrent right upper quadrant
abdominal pain. The importance of CCK provocative tests to reproduce the
pain or demonstrate reduced gallbladder emptying on quantitative
cholescintigraphy in response to CCK is unclear.
Adenomyosis is
characterized by hyperplasia of the gallbladder mucosa and by deep clefts.
The meaning of any biliary-type symptoms is moot.
| 3.4 Postcholecystectomy
Syndrome |
page 455 |
Cholecystectomy relieves
the symptoms of most, but definitely not all, patients with biliary
calculi. The occasional patient will experience diarrhea following
cholecystectomy, perhaps the result of unmasking a malabsorption of bile
acids, which leads to a cholerrheic (bile acid-induced) diarrhea. Symptoms
persist or recur in 5-50%, depending upon selection bias. Most often the
original complaint was not true biliary pain, but rather reflux
esophagitis, peptic ulcer disease or the irritable bowel syndrome. There
may be recurrent biliary tract problems such as a biliary stricture,
retained common duct stone or even pancreatic disease. In suspected cases,
ERCP is indicated. Occasionally, narrowing (papillary stenosis) or
increased tone in the sphincter of Oddi (sphincter dysfunction) will
produce recurrent biliary-type pain, often with abnormal liver
biochemistry tests or increased serum amylase. Nuclear medicine scanning (cholescintigraphy)
and sphincter of Oddi pressure measurements (manometry) provide diagnostic
clues. Endoscopic sphincterotomy relieves pain in selected patients.
| 3.5 Neoplasms of the
Gallbladder |
page 456 |
Carcinoma of the
gallbladder is fortunately uncommon, as its prognosis is extremely poor.
Adenocarcinoma is generally cured only when incidentally discovered at
cholecystectomy for cholelithiasis. Gallstones are present in most (75%)
cases, probably as innocent bystanders rather than as causal agents (Figure
2). Any risk is too low to advocate prophylactic cholecystectomy
in the many people with asymptomatic gallstones. A porcelain gallbladder
with calcifications in the wall predisposes to adenocarcinoma and calls
for cholecystectomy. Large gallstones (>3 cm) are also a risk factor
for carcinoma.
The clinical features of
gallbladder carcinoma consist of pain, a hard mass in the right
epigastrium, jaundice, pruritus and weight loss. Ultrasound and CT scan
help define the mass and metastases. Prognosis is grim, as it is common
for the cancer to spread. The five-year survival is less than 5%. Therapy
is palliative; most are not resectable unless removed incidentally at the
time of cholecystectomy.
Benign tumors of the
gallbladder are uncommon. Adenomas are asymptomatic, being detected on
ultrasound or found incidentally at surgery. Small masses in the wall of
the gallbladder, however, are relatively common findings on ultrasound;
when multiple they usually represent cholesterol polyps or adherent
gallstones. Polypoidal masses warrant a repeat ultrasound in six months.
If these are larger than 1 cm, surgery is necessary to exclude a
carcinoma. |