Acalculous cholecystitis
Appearance
Blockage of the cystic duct in the absence of stones
Epidemiology
[edit | edit source]- Accounts for 5% of cholecystitis
- Typically occurs in critically unwell patients, but certainly CAN occur in otherwise well patients, although they usually have risk factors
Risk factors
[edit | edit source]Anatomical
[edit | edit source]- Ampullary stenosis
- Choledochal cyst
- Cystic duct obstruction by some sort of CBD stent/PTC
- Metastases to porta hepatis
Acute events
[edit | edit source]- Critical illness including CPR
- Prolonged TPN
- Major trauma
- Burns
- Childbirth
- Mechanical ventilation
- Multiple transfusions
- Non-biliary surgery
- Sepsis/hypotension
Chronic morbidity
[edit | edit source]- Coronary heart disease
- CKD
- Diabetes
- CCF
- Old age
- Vasculitis
Immunosuppression
[edit | edit source]- AML
- AIDS
- BM transplantation
Medications
[edit | edit source]- Opioids
- Sunitinib
Cholesterol emboli
[edit | edit source]Haemobilia
[edit | edit source]Specific primary infections
[edit | edit source]- Ascaris lumbricoides
- Brucella
- Campylobacter jejuni
- Candida
- Coxiella burnetii
- Cryptosporidium
- CMV
- Echinococcus granulosis
- EBV
- Flavivirus
- HBV and HAV
- Isospora
- Leptospira
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Plasmodium
- Salmonella
- Vibrio cholerae
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Poorly understood
- Probably involves bile stasis (prolonged fasting) and GB ischaemia (low-flow state), which then causes GB distension and a local inflammatory response in the GB wall
- Once acalculous cholecystitis is established, secondary infection with enteric pathogens is common
- Can progress to gangrenous GB in about 50%
- Perforation is said to occur in 10%
Presentation
[edit | edit source]- Generally similar to that seen in calculous cholecystitis
- Critically ill patients may just have fever and may not have RUQ pain - consider as a cause of PUO in this setting, especially with imaging findings
- A smouldering disease with recurrent symptoms for months may reflect either gallstone-related disease or a functional GB disorder
Imaging
[edit | edit source]- USS first-line
- >4mm wall thickness
- Sonographic Murphy's sign
- Pericholecystic fluid/subserosal oedema
- However, most critically unwell patients in ICU will have at least one abnormal GB finding on USS, so the specificity is questionable (84% have one abnormal findings, and 57% have three or more)
- CT second-line - also excludes other causes
- Gas in GB wall or lumen, lack of GB wall enhancement, and oedema around the GB have the highest specificity (99, 95 and 92% respectively) but all have poor sensitivity
- HIDA scan is diagnostic if a third-line study is required, but can have a false positive result
- Failure to opacify the GB at one hour is a positive test
- Specificity 58-88%
Diagnosis
[edit | edit source]- Generally made in patients with all of the following:
- Clinical manifestations suggestive of cholecystitis
- Risk factors for acalculous cholecystitis
- Suggestive radiologic features
- No evidence of other conditions
Differential diagnosis
[edit | edit source]- Acute calculous cholecystitis with missed gallstones on USS
- Wall thickening/oedema is also seen in:
- Hypoalbuminaemia
- Ascites
- Sludge
- Non-shadowing stones
- Gallbladder cancer/adenomyomatosis
- Chronic liver disease/hepatitis
- Right heart failure
- Fluid overload from kidney disease including nephrotic syndrome
- Pancreatitis
- Blockage of venous or lymphatic drainage of GB
- Multiple myeloma
- Pyelonephritis (reactive)
- Systemic infection (viral or bacterial)
- Brucellosis
- Dengue
- AIDS
Management
[edit | edit source]- As per calculous cholecystitis
- In most patients with true 'ICU' acalculous cholecystitis, start off with antibiotics, step up to perc cholecystostomy if not improving after a few days, and finally step up to cholecystectomy if still not improving
- Higher morbidity and mortality than calculous
- Percutaneous cholecystostomy is a much more attractive option - >90% of patients improve, and interval cholecystectomy is only necessary if follow-up imaging continues to demonstrate the positive findings
- GB necrosis, emphysematous cholecystitis, and perforation require cholecystectomy
- Failure to improve within 24 hours after cholecystostomy suggests gangrenous cholecystitis, catheter dislodgement, bile peritonitis, or an incorrect diagnosis. Rescue cholecystectomy is generally required to avoid imminent death.
- Remove the cholecystostomy tube when cholecystitis resolves and drainage is minimal (<10mL per day, which is usually 4-6 weeks later). Repeat the USS to exclude stones/sludge.