| Literature DB >> 29032636 |
Masamichi Yokoe1, Jiro Hata2, Tadahiro Takada3, Steven M Strasberg4, Horacio J Asbun5, Go Wakabayashi6, Kazuto Kozaka7, Itaru Endo8, Daniel J Deziel9, Fumihiko Miura3, Kohji Okamoto10, Tsann-Long Hwang11, Wayne Shih-Wei Huang12, Chen-Guo Ker13, Miin-Fu Chen11, Ho-Seong Han14, Yoo-Seok Yoon14, In-Seok Choi15, Dong-Sup Yoon16, Yoshinori Noguchi1, Satoru Shikata17, Tomohiko Ukai18, Ryota Higuchi19, Toshifumi Gabata20, Yasuhisa Mori21, Yukio Iwashita22, Taizo Hibi23, Palepu Jagannath24, Eduard Jonas25, Kui-Hin Liau26, Christos Dervenis27, Dirk J Gouma28, Daniel Cherqui29, Giulio Belli30, O James Garden31, Mariano Eduardo Giménez32, Eduardo de Santibañes33, Kenji Suzuki34, Akiko Umezawa35, Avinash Nivritti Supe36, Henry A Pitt37, Harjit Singh38, Angus C W Chan39, Wan Yee Lau40, Anthony Yuen Bun Teoh41, Goro Honda42, Atsushi Sugioka43, Koji Asai44, Harumi Gomi45, Takao Itoi46, Seiki Kiriyama47, Masahiro Yoshida48,49, Toshihiko Mayumi50, Naoki Matsumura50, Hiromi Tokumura50, Seigo Kitano51, Koichi Hirata52, Kazuo Inui53, Yoshinobu Sumiyama54, Masakazu Yamamoto19.
Abstract
The Tokyo Guidelines 2013 (TG13) for acute cholangitis and cholecystitis were globally disseminated and various clinical studies about the management of acute cholecystitis were reported by many researchers and clinicians from all over the world. The 1st edition of the Tokyo Guidelines 2007 (TG07) was revised in 2013. According to that revision, the TG13 diagnostic criteria of acute cholecystitis provided better specificity and higher diagnostic accuracy. Thorough our literature search about diagnostic criteria for acute cholecystitis, new and strong evidence that had been released from 2013 to 2017 was not found with serious and important issues about using TG13 diagnostic criteria of acute cholecystitis. On the other hand, the TG13 severity grading for acute cholecystitis has been validated in numerous studies. As a result of these reviews, the TG13 severity grading for acute cholecystitis was significantly associated with parameters including 30-day overall mortality, length of hospital stay, conversion rates to open surgery, and medical costs. In terms of severity assessment, breakthrough and intensive literature for revising severity grading was not reported. Consequently, TG13 diagnostic criteria and severity grading were judged from numerous validation studies as useful indicators in clinical practice and adopted as TG18/TG13 diagnostic criteria and severity grading of acute cholecystitis without any modification. Free full articles and mobile app of TG18 are available at: http://www.jshbps.jp/modules/en/index.php?content_id=47. Related clinical questions and references are also included.Entities:
Keywords: Acute; Cholecystitis; Diagnosis; Diagnostic imaging; Guidelines; Severity of Illness Index
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29032636 DOI: 10.1002/jhbp.515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci ISSN: 1868-6974 Impact factor: 7.027