Gallbladder and Biliary Tree: Tombazzi Flashcards

1
Q

Your pt has BROWN pigment gallstones. What does this signify?

A

Infection

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2
Q

Your pt has BLACK pigment gallstones. What does this signify?

A

Hemolysis

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3
Q

The most common type of gallstone is the:

A

Cholesterol stone

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4
Q

What is the most significant way in which your body gets rid of cholesterol?

A

Through bile excretion

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5
Q

What are the risk factors for cholesterol gallstones?

A
the 4 F's
Female
Fat- excess free cholesterol
Forty- older age = less bile salt prod. = excess free chol.
Fertile- estrogen
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6
Q

List the 3 major pathophysiological contributors to gallstone formation.

A

Cholesterol supersaturation
Accelerated nucleation (crystalization)
Gallbladder hypomotility

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7
Q

A loss of balance between these two factors contributes to cholesterol supersaturation:
Explain the relationship, the consequences of their relative change.

A

Free cholesterol and Bile acids
FC^, BA stays same = problem
FC stays same, BA v = problem

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8
Q

Describe the histology of abetalipoproteinemia and why this occurs.

A

Histo: foamy enterocytes bc of build-up of triglycerides and inability to release them to the lacteals.
Usually present as infant w/ failure to thrive.

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9
Q

Pt comes into your ED with RUQ abdominal pain. They have sickle cell dz. What do you need to rule out as the cause of the RUQ pain?

A
Black pigment (hemolysis) gallstones causing obstruction of bile ducts/cholecystitis. 
Hemolysis --> high levels of unconjugated bilirubin--> black stones
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10
Q

What type of stone is called a “primary biliary” stone, meaning it was formed in the bile ducts and not the gallbladder?

A

Brown pigment stone

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11
Q

For this clinical manifestation of gallstones, describe the sign/symptom/lab finding that will differentiate it from other clinical manifestations:
Biliary colic

A

Abdominal pain

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12
Q

For this clinical manifestation of gallstones, describe the sign/symptom/lab finding that will differentiate it from other clinical manifestations:
Acute cholecystitis

A

Fever and abd. pain- this is a medical emergency. Need to admit pt, get them on IV abx and get surgical consult. Possible complication- ruptured GB–> sepsis–> death

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13
Q

For this clinical manifestation of gallstones, describe the sign/symptom/lab finding that will differentiate it from other clinical manifestations:
Choledocholithiasis (stone in CBD) w/ cholangitis (abd. pain, fever, jaundice)

A

Jaundice, abd pain, fever - due to blocked COMMON bile duct–> hyperbilirubinemia, lighter stools bc bilirubin not making it to intestines to be oxidized to urobilinogen.

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14
Q

For this clinical manifestation of gallstones, describe the sign/symptom/lab finding that will differentiate it from other clinical manifestations:
Biliary pancreatitis

A

Increased Amylase, abd. pain- due to pancreatic injury

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15
Q

30yo WF, 2 weeks post-partum. Light stools. RUQ pain. Jaundice. What is going on?

A

Choledocholithiasis (stone in CBD) w/ cholangitis

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16
Q

What is cholangitis?

A

Abd. pain
Fever
Jaundice

17
Q

You find neutrophils infiltrating glands of the GB. On gross examination, you find the GB serosal surface to be green and red. What do you have here?

A

Acute cholecystitis- red/green serosa = subserosal hemorrhage.

18
Q

Describe the histologic findings in gangrenous cholecystitis.

A

The wall of the GB is thickened, edematous, and hyperemic. Neutrophilic inflammation. Invasion by gram neg. anaerobes (clostridia/coliforms) can result in gas gangrene = acute “emphysematous” cholecystitis

19
Q

What is the hallmark histological sign of chronic cholecystitis?

A

Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses- GB mucosal infoldings into the wall of the GB, forming deep sinuses/buried crypts of epithelium.
Will also see lymphocytic infiltrates, subSEROSAL fibrosis.

20
Q

What is xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis?

A

When the Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses rupture into the wall of the GB, macrophages migrate to the site for cleanup and get foamy and pigmented from ingested biliary phospholipids. These are called xanthoma cells.

21
Q

Intrahepatic cholestasis is usually _______ in etiology.

A

metabolic etiology: primary biliary cirrhosis, meds, malignant infiltration, primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC)

22
Q

Extrahepatic cholestasis is usually ________ in etiology.

How to dx?

A

Obstructive
Will see biliary ductal dilation proximal to obst. on ultrasound.
MRI
Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
Endoscopic US

23
Q

Describe the histological manifestation of cholestasis on hepatocytes.

A

Hepatocytes accumulate bile pigments. Can be extracellular bile plugs (brown-green in color) or intracellular (yellow-brown vesicles)

24
Q

What is going on in primary sclerosing cholangitis and what is the terminal pathology?

A

Inflammatory infiltration of larger ducts and circumferential “onion skin” fibrosis of ductules–> ductal obliteration–> biliary cirrhosis –> may lead to cholangiocarcinoma

25
Q

How does cirrhosis secondary to hepatitis and cirrhosis secondary to biliary obstruction differ on histology?

A

Hepatic regenerative nodules are more circular in hepatitis cirrhosis.
The nodules are more irregularly shaped in obstructive biliary cirrhosis.

26
Q

Describe the clinical course of cholangiocarcinoma.

A

Rapid, often ending in mortality. They don’t show symptoms until really late in the course, by that time, it is too late to treat.

27
Q

Due to their adenomatous nature, how do you differentiate cholangiocarcinomas from Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses?

A

R-A sinuses do not grow horizontally, whereas the adenocarcinoma will.

28
Q

What is porcelain gallbladder and what is its clinical significance?

A

Rare, caused by extensive dystrophic calcification within the gallbladder wall.
Notable for markedly incr. incidence of cholangiocarcinoma.

29
Q

Hemobilia- blood in bile duct for any reason, presents as:

A

Abd. pain
Melena
Jaundice from clot–> obstruction