Acute calculous cholecystitis

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Background

  • Inflammation of the gallbladder caused by obstruction of the cystic duct by gallstones
  • Most common complication of cholelithiasis
  • 10-20% of patients with gallstones will develop cholecystitis
  • Risk factors (5 F's — mnemonic):
    • Female, Forty, Fertile (multiparity), Fat (obesity), Fair (Northern European descent)
    • Additional: rapid weight loss, TPN, medications (estrogen, fibrates, octreotide)
  • Pathophysiology: cystic duct obstruction → gallbladder distension → wall inflammation → secondary infection (in ~50%)
  • Complications: gangrenous cholecystitis (20%), perforation (2-15%), gallstone ileus, cholecystoenteric fistula, emphysematous cholecystitis

Clinical Features

  • RUQ pain (constant, >4-6 hours duration — distinguishes from biliary colic which resolves)
  • Pain radiates to right scapula or shoulder (phrenic nerve irritation)
  • Nausea and vomiting (common)
  • Fever (low-grade; high fever suggests complications)
  • Murphy sign: inspiratory arrest during RUQ palpation (sensitivity ~65%)
    • Sonographic Murphy sign (pain with probe pressure over sonographically visualized gallbladder) is more specific
  • RUQ guarding, rebound tenderness (suggests peritonitis)
  • Jaundice suggests choledocholithiasis (common bile duct stone) or cholangitis (Charcot triad/Reynolds pentad)

Differential Diagnosis

Template:RUQ pain DDX

Evaluation

Labs

  • WBC: leukocytosis (12,000-15,000); WBC >20,000 suggests gangrenous or emphysematous cholecystitis
  • LFTs: mild elevation of AST/ALT; alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin elevated if CBD stone
  • Lipase: rule out concurrent pancreatitis (gallstone pancreatitis)
  • Lactate: if septic
  • Blood cultures: if febrile or septic
  • Pregnancy test in reproductive-age women

RUQ Ultrasound (Test of Choice)

  • Sensitivity 88%, specificity 80% for acute cholecystitis
  • Findings:
    • Gallstones (echogenic foci with posterior acoustic shadowing)
    • Gallbladder wall thickening >3-4 mm (nonspecific — also seen in CHF, ascites, hepatitis)
    • Pericholecystic fluid
    • Sonographic Murphy sign (most predictive single finding)
    • Gallbladder distension (>10 cm long or >5 cm transverse)
  • Combined findings increase diagnostic accuracy

HIDA Scan

  • Most accurate test for cholecystitis (sensitivity 97%, specificity 90%)
  • Non-visualization of gallbladder at 4 hours = positive for cholecystitis (cystic duct obstruction)
  • Takes 1-4 hours to complete — not practical for acutely ill ED patients
  • Use when US equivocal and diagnosis uncertain

CT

  • Not first-line but may show gallbladder distension, wall thickening, pericholecystic stranding
  • Useful for identifying complications (perforation, abscess, emphysematous changes)

Management

ED Management

  • NPO
  • IV fluid resuscitation
  • Pain control:
    • Ketorolac 15-30 mg IV (shown to be effective and may reduce gallbladder inflammation)
    • Opioids (morphine or hydromorphone) — traditional concern about sphincter of Oddi spasm is likely overstated
  • Antiemetics: ondansetron 4 mg IV
  • Antibiotics if complicated (febrile, septic, diabetic, immunocompromised):
    • Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375-4.5g IV OR
    • Ceftriaxone 2g IV + metronidazole 500 mg IV
    • Coverage: gram-negatives (E. coli, Klebsiella) and anaerobes
  • Surgical consultation for cholecystectomy

Definitive Treatment

  • Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (standard of care)
  • Early cholecystectomy (<72 hours) preferred — associated with shorter hospital stays and lower complication rates[1]
  • Percutaneous cholecystostomy for patients too unstable for surgery (critically ill, multiple comorbidities)

Special Populations

  • Acalculous cholecystitis: occurs in critically ill/ICU patients without gallstones (5-10% of cases)
  • Emphysematous cholecystitis: gas-forming organisms; higher perforation risk; more common in diabetic men
  • Elderly/diabetics: higher risk of complications, may present atypically

Disposition

  • Admit all patients with acute cholecystitis
  • ICU if septic, gangrenous, or emphysematous cholecystitis
  • Surgical consultation in ED for early cholecystectomy

See Also

References

  1. Gutt CN, et al. Acute cholecystitis: early versus delayed cholecystectomy, a multicenter randomized trial (ACDC study). Ann Surg. 2013;258(3):385-393. PMID 24022431
  • Yokoe M, et al. Tokyo Guidelines 2018: diagnostic criteria and severity grading of acute cholecystitis. J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci. 2018;25(1):41-54. PMID 29032636
  • Ansaloni L, et al. 2016 WSES guidelines on acute calculous cholecystitis. World J Emerg Surg. 2016;11:25. PMID 27307785
  • Trowbridge RL, et al. Does this patient have acute cholecystitis? JAMA. 2003;289(1):80-86. PMID 12503981