Although the ultrasonic detection of gallbladder sludge is relatively frequent, its clinical importance remains unclear, partly because of the paucity of reliable investigations regarding its natural course in patients without stones. In a retrospective study we investigated the course and clinical significance of gallbladder sludge in patients without stones or other identified gallbladder abnormalities. The diagnosis of gallbladder sludge was made by ultrasound scan in 286 (1.7%) of 17,021 patients. The mean follow-up period for these patients was 20.3 +/- 11.5 mo. Of this group 56 patients were without both stones and sludge at the initial examination, and gallbladder sludge developed after a mean observation period of 11.2 +/- 10.6 mo. Within 2.0 +/- 3.5 mo after sludge detection, 40 (71.4%) patients were free of sludge and showed normal gallbladder findings. Gallbladder stones without sludge persistence developed in five patients (8.9%) within 2.5 +/- 0.6 mo after diagnosis of sludge, and gallstones with persistence of sludge developed in two other patients (3.6%) after 6.1 and 30.7 mo, respectively. In no cases did the stones become clinically symptomatic in the course of the follow-up period. Acute acalculous cholecystitis developed in four patients (7.1%) from 6.5 to 37.5 mo after the first examination. In five patients, sludge persisted after a mean 22.3 +/- 13.5 mo of follow-up. Although our data show that gallbladder sludge disappeared spontaneously within a relatively short time in 71.4% of patients, gallbladder sludge must be considered an important pathologic entity because gallbladder stones or complications such as acute cholecystitis occurred in 19.6% of patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
From February 1988 to January 1990, 118 fine-needle diagnostic punctures of the gallbladder (DPG) were performed under continuous ultrasound (US) guidance on symptomatic patients with gallstones. The first attempt at gallbladder puncture and aspiration was successful in every patient with use of a 22-gauge needle and continuous US visualization of the needle tip. The aspirated volume varied between 3 and 88 mL (average +/- standard deviation, 25.0 mL +/- 15.3). Biliary analysis revealed an elevation of the cholesterol saturation index in patients with cholesterol gallstones (attenuation at computed tomographic examination of 50 HU or less) relative to that in patients with pigment stones (attenuation more than 50 HU) (1.3 +/- 0.2 vs 1.0 +/- 0.1, P less than .05). The nucleation time was prolonged in patients with pigment stones (19.3 days +/- 3.5 vs 1.8 days +/- 0.8 for patients with cholesterol stones, P less than .001). All patients remained hospitalized for 24 hours after DPG and were reexamined on an outpatient basis at 1 and 3 months thereafter. No complications were detected during either short-term observation or long-term follow-up. The authors conclude that DPG is a safe and valuable technique in the diagnostic work-up of gallstone patients to establish their suitability for nonoperative treatment.
In 10 patients with gail stone disease (eight women, two men; mean (SD) age 47-4 (13) years), bile was obtained by endoscopic aspiration after stimulation of the gail bladder with ceruletid and also by fine needle puncture of the gall bladder under local anaesthetic. The total lipid concentration of the puncture bile samples was mean (SD) 11*9 (4.7) g/dl, significantly higher than the endoscopic bile samples (3.9 (3.3) g/dl, p<0 001). Total bile acids, phospholipids, and biliary cholesterol (expressed in mol%) and cholesterol saturation index showed no significant differences between the two types of samples. The glycocholic acid concentration in the endoscopicaily obtained bile (27.7 (6.6) mol% v 23-3 (5.4) mol%; p<0 01) was significantly higher than the puncture bile samples. Puncture bile exhibited a significantly shorter nucleation time (3.5 (3.3) days v 19*6 (11.9) days; p
Computed tomography facilitates an in vivo classification of gallstones and can aid in the identification of calcifications that escape detection with conventional radiologic procedures. Of patients with radiolucent stones, 54.8% exhibited calcifications either in the form of discrete rims (41.9%) or at the center of the stone (12.9%). Densities of the noncalcified areas of partially calcified stones averaged 40.68 +/- 6.8 Hounsfield units (HU), which was not significantly higher than the average of 31.85 +/- 3.19 HU for noncalcified stones. Calcified regions showed significantly higher densities (240.0 +/- 28.6 HU, p less than 0.001, x +/- SEM). Of the identified stones, 16.1% showed densities greater than 50 HU. These were primarily bilirubin stones, which cannot yet be treated successfully with conservative therapeutic modalities.
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