Title: ACUTE CHOLECYSTITIS
1ACUTE CHOLECYSTITIS
Acute cholecystitis is inflammation of
gall-bladder.
2BILIARY ANATOMY
3Anatomy vascular supply
4ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS
- infection
- discoordination passage of bile
- metabolic disturbance
5CLASSIFICATION
I. Acute calculous cholecystitis II. Acute
non-calculous cholecystitis 1. Catarrhal. 2.
Phlegmonous. 3. Gangrenous. 4. Perforated. 5.
Complicated a) Hydropsy b) Empyema c)
Pancreatitis d) Jaundice e) Hepatitis f)
Cholangitis g) Infiltrate h) Abscess i)
hepato-renal insufficiency j) Peritonitis.
6Classifying the Biliary Stone Patient
Asymptomatic Cholelithiasis Incidental Finding on Sonogram
Acute Cholecystitis Cholelithiasis on Sonogram, clinical Cholecystitis diagnosis or Positive Pipida Scan
Symptomatic Cholelithiasis Positive Sonogram, normal Liver Function Tests
Cholelithiasis with Suspected Choledocholithiasis Abnormal Liver Function Tests (Serum Transaminases elevation or Bilirubin gt3.0, gallstone pancreatitis)
Cholelithiasis with Choledocholithiasis CBD Stone on Sonogram, MR Cholangiography or Jaundice
Cholelithiasis with Resolving Gallstone Pancreatitis Pancreatitis on Sonogram, CT or MER Cholangiography or clinically, Documented High Serum Amylase and Lipase - WITH - Decreasing Serum Pancreatic Enzymes after initial attack
7Identifying Biliary Stone Patients
- 1) History and Physical Examination,
- 2) Liver Function Studies,
- 3) Sonographic Findings.
8BILE STONES
9BILE STONES
10The pathological sequences during a bout of
uncomplicated cholecystitis
11Sequence of pathological processes with local
inflammation around a gallbladder
12Sequence of pathological processes. Formation of
an empyema or mucocele of the gallbladder
13Sequence of pathological processes leading to
perforation of the gallbladder
14Sequence of pathological processes localising a
perforation of the gallbladder
15Symptoms and clinical signs
Pain syndrome. Characteristic for it is great
acute pain in right hypochondrium and epigastric
area with an irradiation in right supraclavicular
area and right shoulder. If pain syndrome has the
strongly expressed character, it is named hepatic
colic. Dyspepsic syndrome. Frequent symptoms
which disturb a patient, are nausea, frequent
vomitting, at first by gastric maintenance, and
later with bile. Afterwards feelings of
swelling of stomach, delay of emptying and gases.
16Symptoms and clinical signs
Murphy's symptoms is a delay of breathing during
palpation of gall-bladder on inhalation. Kehr's
symptom is strengthening of pain at pressure on
the area of gall-bladder, especially on deep
inhalation. Ortner's symptom painfulness at
the easy pushing on right costal arc by the edge
of palm. Mussy's symptom painfulness at
palpation between the legs (above a collar-bone)
of right nodding muscle. Blumberg's signs are
the increases of painfulness at the rapid taking
away of fingers by which a front abdominal wall
is pressed on. This symptom is not pathognomic
for cholecystitis but matters very much in
diagnostics of peritonitis.
17 Hydropsy (mucocele) of gall-bladder is its
aseptic inflammation, that arises up as a result
of blockade of cystic duct by concrement or
mucus. The bile from a bubble is sucked in, and
on replacement transparent exudation accumulates
in its formation. During palpation increased and
unpainfully gall-bladder is marked in
patients. Empyema of gall-bladder is
unliquidated in time hydropsy, that at repeated
infection is transformed in a new form.
Gall-bladder in such patients is palpated as a
dense, moderately painful formation, however, the
symptoms of irritation of peritoneum, as a rule,
are absent. The high temperature of body is
periodically observed. In blood high leucocytosis
with the shift of formula of blood to the left is
present.
Complications
18 Biliary pancreatitis. Worsening of the patients
condition, appearance of pain, frequent
vomitting, signs of cardio-vascular
insufficiency, high amylasuria, presence of
infiltrate in epigastric area and positive
Voskresensky's and Mayo-Robson's symptoms are its
basic signs.An icterus arises up at violation of
passage of bile in duodenum as a result of
obturation of choledochus by concrement, by putty
or through the edema of head of pancreas. Thus
icterus sclera, bilirubinemia, dark urine and
light unpainted excrement arise. Cholangitis.
The Sharko triad is characteristic for the
patient with this pathology. Next to pain
syndrome and icterus, the temperature of body
rises to 3839 0?, there is a fever, high
leucocytosis and decline of sizes of functional
tests of liver is observed.
Complications
19DIAGNOSTIC PROGRAM
1. Anamnesis and physical methods of
inspection. 2. Survey sciagraphy of organs of
abdominal cavity. 3. Sonography. 4. General
analysis of blood and urine. 5. Diastase
urines. 6. Biochemical blood test (bilirubin,
amylase, alanine aminotransferase, asparaginase,
alkaline phosphatase, creatinine). 7. Coagulogram.
20Tactics and choice of treatment method
1. Bed rest. 2. Hunger of 13 days, than diet ?
5 by Peuzner. 3. Desintoxication therapy
(neohemodes, reopolyglucine). 4. Spasmolytics (
platyphyllin, no-shparum, baralgin). 5.
Antibacterial therapy 6. Inhibitors of protease
(contrical, trasilol, gordox). 7. Desensitizing
preparation (dimedrole, pipolphen, tavegile). 8.
Vitamins (?, ?1, ?6, ?12 vitamins).
21Indication To Surgical Treatment
- All forms of acute calculous cholecystitis
- Destructive and complicated forms of
noncalculous cholecystitis - Acute catarrhal cholecystitis, conservative
treatment of which was uneffective
22Methods of Operative Treatment
- Cholecystectomy from the neck (retrograde)
- Cholecystectomy from the bottom (antegrade)
- Laparoscopic cholecystectomy
23CHOLECYSTECTOMY
24OPERATING ROOM SET-UP
25OPERATING ROOM SET-UP
26Equipment
27STEP 1 Exposing the Cystic Duct and Artery
28STEP 2 Dissecting the Cystic Duct and Artery
29STEP 3 Routine Intra-operative Cholangiogram
30STEP 4 Transecting the Cystic Duct and Artery
31STEP 5 Dissecting the Body of the Gallbladder
32CHOLECYSTECTOMY
33Complications
34Complications
35(No Transcript)
36INTRA-OPERATIVE EXAMINATION
- Sonography Cholangiography Cholangioscopy
37INTRA-OPERATIVE SONOGRAPHY
38INTRA-OPERATIVE SONOGRAPHY
39The Intra-operative Cholangiography
40The Intra-operative Cholangiogram
41The Intra-operative Cholangiogram
42The Intra-operative Cholangiogram
43The Intra-operative Cholangiogram
44The Intra-operative Choledochoscopy
45The Choledochoscopy
46Retrieving the CBD Stones
47CBD Stones