Choledocholithiasis
Background
- Choledocholithiasis occurs when a stone is expelled out of the gallbladder and becomes impacted in the common bile duct
- If infected, becomes Cholangitis
Anatomy & Pathophysiology
- Gallstones are classified as cholesterol stones and pigmented stones (black and brown), and are present in approx 20% of females and 8% of males in the United States
- These stones cause the majority of all biliary tract problems, and depending on where the stone become impacted, specific problems occur.
- Bile flows out the gallbladder, down the cystic duct into the common bile duct, and ultimately into the 1st portion of the duodenum.
Gallbladder disease types
Bile duct and pancreas anatomy. 1. Bile ducts: 2. Intrahepatic bile ducts; 3. Left and right hepatic ducts; 4. Common hepatic duct; 5. Cystic duct; 6. Common bile duct; 7. Sphincter of Oddi; 8. Major duodenal papilla; 9. Gallbladder; 10-11. Right and left lobes of liver; 12. Spleen; 13. Esophagus; 14. Stomach; 15. Pancreas: 16. Accessory pancreatic duct; 17. Pancreatic duct; 18. Small intestine; 19. Duodenum; 20. Jejunum; 21-22: Right and left kidneys.
- Symptomatic cholelithiasis (biliary colic)
- Choledocholithiasis
- Acute calculous cholecystitis
- Ascending cholangitis
- Acalculous cholecystitis
- Biliary atresia
- Cholestasis of pregnancy
Clinical Features
- RUQ pain
- Radiation to the Right shoulder (phrenic nerve irritation)
- Early pain characterized as colicky (intermittent, comes and goes)
- Once impacted, is constant and severe
- Nausea and Vomiting
- Jaundice/scleral icterus
- Caused by build up of direct bilirubin in blood
Differential Diagnosis
RUQ Pain
- Gallbladder disease
- Peptic ulcer disease with or without perforation
- Pancreatitis
- Acute hepatitis
- Pyelonephritis
- Pneumonia
- Kidney stone
- GERD
- Appendicitis (retrocecal)
- Pyogenic liver abscess
- Fitz-Hugh-Curtis Syndrome
- Hepatomegaly due to CHF
- Herpes zoster
- Myocardial ischemia
- Bowel obstruction
- Pulmonary embolism
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm
Evaluation
Labs
- Particularly LFTs, Lipase, and Basic Chemistry
Imaging
- Ultrasound of RUQ
- Noninvasive and quick
- Common bile duct < 4 mm plus 1mm per decade after 40 yrs old
- While UTZ is highly sensitive and specific for acute cholecystitis, it lacks this in identifying cholelithiasis secondary to exam limitations (i.e. difficulty identifying the CBD)
- ERCP - highly sensitive and specific, also therapeutic
- MRCP - comparable to ERCP in Sn/Sp
- HIDA Scan - not useful, as IDA (technetium 99m-labeled iminodiacetic acid) can still go into gallbladder
Management
- Pain relief
- Fluid and electrolyte repletion
- NPO
- If any concern for concomitant acute cholecystitis, start antibiotics
- Always consider Cholangitis
Disposition
- Admission to medical services
- Consult to GI for spherincerotomy and stone removal vs General Surgery for operative management
