| Literature DB >> 17252304 |
Toshihiko Mayumi1, Tadahiro Takada, Yoshifumi Kawarada, Yuji Nimura, Masahiro Yoshida, Miho Sekimoto, Fumihiko Miura, Keita Wada, Masahiko Hirota, Yuichi Yamashita, Masato Nagino, Toshio Tsuyuguchi, Atsushi Tanaka, Harumi Gomi, Henry A Pitt.
Abstract
A systematic review of references conducted in the process of developing the Guidelines for the Management of Acute Cholangitis and Cholecystitis did not find many high-quality research reports. There were no criteria for diagnosis, severity assessment, or patient transfer, and no established principles of clinical practice guidelines for acute cholangitis and cholecystitis. In order to develop guidelines that would be useful in clinical practice, an understanding of the current status of clinical practice for acute cholangitis and cholecystitis was considered essential. After several open symposia and a survey of these two diseases, we developed and published a Japanese-language version of Evidence-Based Practice Guidelines for the Management of Acute Cholangitis and Cholecystitis. In order to prepare international Guidelines, we had repeated discussions about the draft Guidelines together with international experts, and, following the Consensus Meeting, held on April 1-2, 2006, in Tokyo, with the attendance of 300 world experts in the field, the International Guidelines for the Management of Acute Cholangitis and Cholecystitis were developed. In this article, we outline the comments and opinions given at the International Meeting and how they are reflected in the final version of the Guidelines.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17252304 PMCID: PMC2784505 DOI: 10.1007/s00534-006-1163-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Surg ISSN: 0944-1166
Diagnostic criteria for acute cholangitis
| (A) Original | |
| A. Clinical signs | 1. Fever and/or chills |
| 2. Jaundice | |
| 3. Abd. pain (RUQ, epigastric) | |
| B. Laboratory data | 4. Leukocytosis or elevation of CRP level |
| 5. Elevation of ALP or γ-GTP level | |
| C. Imaging findings | 6. Biliary dilatation or etiology (stricture, tumor, stones) |
| Definite diagnosis | (1) All items in A (Charcot’s triad) |
| (2) One or two items in A + all items in B + C | |
| Note: acute hepatitis and other causes of acute abdomen should be excluded | |
a Abnormal WBC count, increased serum CRP level, and other changes indicating inflammation
b Increased serum ALP, γ-GTP (GGT), AST, and ALT levels
Severity assess ment criteria for acute cholangitis
| (A) Proposed severity assessment criteria at International Meeting | |
| “Severe (grade III)” acute cholangitis | |
| “Severe (grade III)” acute cholangitis is that associated with dysfunctions of at least one of the following organs/systems | |
| 1. Cardiovascular | Hypotension |
| 2. Neurologic | Disturbance of consciousness |
| 3. Respiratory | PaO2/FiO2 ratio <300, SpO2 decrease: (not decided) |
| 4. Renal | Oliguria, creatinine >2.0 mg/dl |
| 5. Hepatic | PT > 15?, 20? Seconds? or INR > 1.5?, or PT prolongation?: (not decided) |
| 6. Hematologic | Platelets < 100 000/mm3? |
| 7. APACHE II | To be included or not included? If yes, Score? |
| “Moderate (grade II)” acute cholangitis | |
| “Moderate (grade II)” acute cholangitis is that associated with at least one of the following factors | |
| High fever > 39 °C?: (threshold level was not decided) | |
| WBC > 20 000/mm3? (threshold level was not decided) | |
| No remission for 48–72 h | |
| Note: elderly patients (>75 years) and patients with medical comorbidities should be closely monitored | |
a General supportive care and antibiotics
Diagnostic criteria for acute cholecystitis
| (A) Proposed at International Meeting |
| 1. (1) Murphy’s sign, (2) RUQ, mass/pain/tenderness, (3) rigidity/muscle guarding, (4) rebound tenderness |
| 2. (1) Fever, (2) abnormal WBC count, (3) elevated CRP |
| 3. Imaging findings characteristic of acute cholecystitis |
| Suspected diagnosis: one item in 1. and one item in 2. are positive. (Suspected diagnosis may be deleted? If so, definition of definite diagnosis?) |
| Definite diagnosis: 3. is positive in patients who fulfill the criteria for suspected diagnosis |
| Note: acute hepatitis, other causes of acute abdomen, and chronic cholecystitis should be excluded |
aImaging findings of acute cholecystitis
Severity assessment criteria for acute cholecystitis
| (A) Proposed at International Meeting | |
| “Severe (grade III)” acute cholecystitis | |
| “Severe (grade III)” acute cholecystitis is associated with any one of the following categories. Organ/System dysfunction (Note: Thresholds were not discussed at the Summary session) | |
| • | Cardiovascular Hypotension |
| • | Neurologic (Disturbance of consciousness) |
| • | Respiratory (PaO2/FiO2 ratio <300) |
| • | Renal (Oliguria, creatinine >2.0 mg/dl) |
| • | Hepatic (T. bilirubin >5.0 mg/dl) |
| • | DIC (Platelets <100000/mm3) |
| Severe local inflmmation | |
| Biliary peritonitis, pericholecystic abscess, hepatic abscess, gangrenous cholecystitis, emphysematous cholecystitis | |
| “Moderate (grade II)” acute cholecystitis | |
| “Moderate (grade II)” acute cholecystitis is associated with any of the following conditions. | |
| • | WBC > 15000, 18000 (Threshold?) |
| • | Palpable inflammatory mass |
| • | Onset > 72–96 h |
| • | Serious thickening? (or “erious” deleted?), thickening of wall (include threshold?, if so, what thickness — 6–7 mm or 8 mm? or twice normal gallbladder wall?) and fluid collection around the gallbladder. (Is both thickness of gallbladder wall and fluid collection around the gallbladder necessary?) |
| Liver cirrhosis should be described in a Note. | |
| “Mild (grade I)” acute cholecystitis | |
| “Mild (grade I)” acute cholecystitis does not meet the criteria of “severe” or “moderate” acute cholecystitis | |
| (B) Final version of severity assessment criteria for acute cholecystitis | |
| Mild (grade I) acute cholecystitis | |
| “Mild (grade I)” acute cholecystitis does not meet the criteria of “severe (grade III)” or “moderate (grade II)” acute cholecystitis. It can also be defined as acute cholecystitis in a healthy patient with no organ dysfunction and mild inflammatory changes in the gallbladder, making cholecystectomy a safe and low-risk operative procedure. | |
| Moderate (grade II) acute cholecystitis | |
| “Moderate” acute cholecystitis is associated with any one of the following conditions: | |
| 1. | Elevated WBC count (>18 000/mm3) |
| 2. | Palpable tender mass in the right upper abdominal quadrant |
| 3. | Duration of complaints >72 ha |
| 4. | Marked local inflammation (biliary peritonitis, pericholecystic abscess, hepatic abscess, gangrenous cholecystitis, emphysematous cholecystitis) |
| a Laparoscopic surgery should be performed within 96 h of the onset of acute cholecystitis | |
| Severe (grade III) acute cholecystitis | |
| “Severe” acute cholecystitis is associated with dysfunction of any one of the following organs/systems | |
| 1. | Cardiovascular dysfunction (hypotension requiring treatment with dopamine ≧5 µg/kg per min, or any dose of dobutamine) |
| 2. | Neurological dysfunction (decreased level of consciousness) |
| 3. | Respiratory dysfunction (PaO2/FiO2 ratio <300) |
| 4. | Renal dysfunction (oliguria, creatinine >2.0 mg/dl) |
| 5. | Hepatic dysfunction (PT-INR > 1.5) |
| 6. | Hematological dysfunction (platelet count <100000/mm3) |
Fig. 1Flowchart for general guidance for the management of acute biliary infection
Fig. 2a,bFlowcharts for the management of acute cholangitis. a Original; b modified at the Meeting
Fig. 3a,bFlowcharts for the management of acute cholecystitis. a Original; b modified at the Meeting. GB, gallbladder; LC, laparoscopic cholecystectomy
| Ultrasonography | |
| • | Sonographic Murphy sign (tenderness elicited by pressing the gallbladder with the ultrasound probe) |
| • | Thickened gallbladder wall (>4 mm, if the patient does not have chronic liver disease and/or ascites or right heart failure) |
| • | Enlarged gallbladder (long axis diameter >8 cm, short axis diameter >4 cm) |
| • | Incarcerated gallstone, debris echo, pericholecystic fluid collection |
| • | Sonolucent layer in the gallbladder wall, striated intramural lucencies, and Doppler signals |
| MRI | |
| • | Pericholecystic high signal |
| • | Enlarged gallbladder |
| • | Thickened gallbladder wall |
| CT | |
| • | Thickened gallbladder wall |
| • | Pericholecystic fluid collection |
| • | Enlarged gallbladder |
| • | Linear high-density areas in the pericholecystic fat tissue |
| Tc-HIDA scan (technetium hepatobiliary iminodiacetic acid scan) | |
| • | Non-visualized gallbladder with normal uptake and excretion of radioactivity |
| • | Rim sign (augmentation of radioactivity around the gallbladder fossa) |