Literature DB >> 7519418

Hyperbilirubinemia without common bile duct abnormalities and hyperamylasemia without pancreatitis in patients with gallbladder disease.

S M Kurzweil1, M J Shapiro, C H Andrus, C M Wittgen, V M Herrmann, D L Kaminski.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the incidence of jaundice and hyperamylasemia in the absence of common bile duct abnormalities or clinical pancreatitis in patients undergoing cholecystectomy.
DESIGN: A continuous, prospective analysis of a consecutive case series was performed on all patients undergoing cholecystectomy.
SETTING: An urban, tertiary care university hospital. PATIENTS: Adult patients with gallbladder disease. INTERVENTION: All patients underwent cholecystectomy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The presence or absence of common bile duct abnormalities was evaluated by cholangiography, and pancreatitis was identified by clinical signs, imaging studies, and direct visual inspection during cholecystectomy.
RESULTS: All patients (N = 1746) undergoing cholecystectomy were prospectively categorized as having chronic calculous (n = 1410), acute calculous (n = 217), chronic acalculous (n = 70), or acute acalculous (n = 49) gallbladder disease. It was uncommon for patients with chronic calculous cholecystitis to have an elevated bilirubin level with no choledocholithiasis and a normal common bile duct or to have hyperamylasemia without pancreatitis. Twenty-five percent of the patients with acute calculous cholecystitis had a serum bilirubin level between 34 and 86 mumol/L (2.0 and 5.0 mg/dL) with no common bile duct abnormality and 4% had hyperamylasemia without pancreatitis. Over one third of the patients with acute acalculous cholecystitis had an elevated bilirubin level with a normal common bile duct or an elevated amylase level without pancreatitis.
CONCLUSION: Jaundice and hyperamylasemia can be produced by gallbladder disease alone.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7519418     DOI: 10.1001/archsurg.1994.01420320055010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Surg        ISSN: 0004-0010


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