The Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute Cholecystitis: A Comprehensive Narrative Review for a Practical Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Epidemiology
3. Etiology
4. Diagnosis
4.1. Clinical Presentation and Physical Examination
4.2. Laboratory Tests
4.3. Imaging Findings
5. Clinical Evolution
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- Gangrenous cholecystitis. Transmural inflammation and ischemic necrosis of the gallbladder wall, occurring approximately in 20% of cases, is the most common complication of AC [37].
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- Emphysematous cholecystitis. This is characterized by intraluminal or intramural proliferation of gas-forming organisms (e.g., Klebsiella, Clostridium, or Escherichia coli) [37].
- -
- -
- Gallbladder perforation. This occurs in about 10% of patients with AC and consists of a loss of continuity of the gallbladder wall, mainly due to ischemia and necrosis, generally located in the fundus of the organ. In most cases, it is a covered perforation, delimited by the surrounding tissue [8].
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- Biliary peritonitis. Rarely, free perforation into the peritoneum can occur. The consequent bile leakage in the peritoneal cavity leads to biliary peritonitis, a condition associated with high mortality [8].
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- Pericholecystic and hepatic abscess. Gallbladder perforation can evolve into a pericholecystic or even hepatic abscess, which is due to the spread of bacterial infection [1].
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- Cholecystoenteric fistula. This is an uncommon complication of gallstone disease, characterized by a fistula between the gallbladder and the gastrointestinal tract, mainly with the duodenum, rarely with the colon, and exceptionally with different gastrointestinal segments [49].
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- Mirizzi syndrome. A stone impacted in the cystic duct or in the gallbladder neck can determine a common hepatic duct obstruction by means of extrinsic compression, with consequent cholestasis. In this setting, a biliary fistula may develop between the gallbladder and the common bile duct (cholecystocholedochal fistula) [49].
- -
- Gallstone ileus and Bouveret syndrome. Very rarely, gallstones may pass through a cholecystoenteric fistula and, if more than 2.5 cm in size, they can impact the terminal ileum at the level of the ileocecal valve, leading to mechanical bowel obstruction (gallstone ileus). Exceptionally, the gallstone impacts in the duodenum, causing a gastric outlet obstruction (Bouveret syndrome) [49].
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- Hemorrhagic cholecystitis. The presence of blood inside the gallbladder lumen is mainly due to the rupture of a hepatic artery pseudoaneurism. Traditionally, the clinical presentation consists of Quinckle’s triad (biliary colic, jaundice, and overt upper gastrointestinal bleeding) [36].
6. Treatment
6.1. Medical Treatment
6.2. Diagnosis and Treatment of Gallstone-Associated Disease
6.3. Surgery (Cholecystectomy)
6.4. Gallbladder Drainage
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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AC Severity Grading | Clinical Features | Surgical Management |
---|---|---|
Mild AC | Disease confined to the gallbladder, absence of local and systemic complications. Clinical presentation: right upper quadrant pain (±fever/nausea/vomiting/Murphy sign) Laboratory tests: leukocytosis, increased CRP Imaging studies (US/CT/MR/HIDA scan): gallbladder wall thickening with layered appearance, gallstones/retained debris (±gallbladder enlargement/pericholecystic fluid), absence of radiotracer uptake in the gallbladder | ELC |
Moderate AC | Local complications (gangrenous cholecystitis, pericholecystic abscess, biliary peritonitis, emphysematous cholecystitis) and/or WBCs > 18.000/mm3 and/or palpable tender mass in the right upper abdominal quadrant and/or duration of symptoms > 72 h | ELC or DLC (in patients not fit for surgery at hospital admission) |
Severe AC | Systemic complications with at least one organ failure/dysfunction (cardiovascular, neurological, respiratory, renal, hepatic, or hematological dysfunction) | ELC (only if intensive care support is available) in patients with favorable clinical state or GBD (if ELC is contraindicated) followed by DLC after complete clinical recovery |
Clinical Setting | Decision-Making for Cholecystectomy |
---|---|
Pregnant women |
|
Liver cirrhosis |
|
Elderly patients | ELC should be considered; frailty and surgical scores can assist in the therapeutic decision |
Concomitant acute mild biliary pancreatitis | In mild biliary pancreatitis, ELC is a better strategy with respect to DLC |
Concomitant choledocholithiasis | According to local expertise, a detailed evaluation of the biliary tree can be performed preoperatively by EUS or MRCP, or intraoperatively using laparoscopic US or cholangiography The presence of common bile duct stones warrants therapeutic ERCP pre-, intra- or post-operatively |
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Mencarini, L.; Vestito, A.; Zagari, R.M.; Montagnani, M. The Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute Cholecystitis: A Comprehensive Narrative Review for a Practical Approach. J. Clin. Med. 2024, 13, 2695. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13092695
Mencarini L, Vestito A, Zagari RM, Montagnani M. The Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute Cholecystitis: A Comprehensive Narrative Review for a Practical Approach. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2024; 13(9):2695. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13092695
Chicago/Turabian StyleMencarini, Lara, Amanda Vestito, Rocco Maurizio Zagari, and Marco Montagnani. 2024. "The Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute Cholecystitis: A Comprehensive Narrative Review for a Practical Approach" Journal of Clinical Medicine 13, no. 9: 2695. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13092695