EXPLAINING OF GALL BLADDER STONE
Introduction
Gallstone disease is one of the most common problems affecting the digestive tract The prevalence of gallstones is related to many factors, including age, gender, and ethnic background
Women are three times more likely to develop gallstones than men, and first-degree relatives of patients with gallstones have a twofold greater prevalence In order to understanding the gall bladder stone formation and its types it should be first known the anatomy of the gall bladder as follow
GALL BLADDER STONES |
Anatomy of the Gallbladder
The gallbladder is a pear-shaped sac, about 7 to 10 cm long with an average capacity of 30 -50 mL containing bile
When obstructed, the gallbladder can distend markedly and contain up to 300 mL
The gallbladder is located in a fossa on the inferior surface of the liver that is in line with the anatomic division of the liver into right and left liver lobes The gallbladder is divided into four anatomic areas: the fundus, the corpus (body), the infundibulum, and the neck
The fundus is the rounded, blind end that normally extend1 to 2 cm beyond the liver's margin. It contains most of the smooth muscles of the organ, in contrast to the body, which is the main storage area and contains most of the elastic tissue
The body extends from the fundus and tapers into the neck, a funnel-shaped area that connects with the cystic duct
The neck usually follows a gentle curve, the convexity of which may be enlarged to form the infundibulum or Hartman's pouch
The neck lies in the deepest part of the gallbladder fossa and extends into the free portion of the hepatoduodenal ligament
the same peritoneal lining that covers the liver covers the fundus and the inferior surface of the gallbladder
Occasionally the gallbladder has a complete peritoneal covering, and is suspended in a mesentery off the inferior surface of the liver, and rarely it is embedded deep inside the liver parenchyma (an intrahepatic gall bladder
The gallbladder is lined by a single, highly-folded, tall columnar epithelium that contains cholesterol and fat globules. the mucus secreted into the gallbladder originates in the tubuloalveolar glands found in the mucosa lining the infundibulum and neck of the gall bladder, but are absent from the body and fundus
The epithelial lining of the gallbladder is supported by a lamina propria. The muscle layer has circular longitudinal and oblique fibers, but without well developed layers. The perimuscular subserosa contains connective tissue, nerves, vessels, lymphatics, and adipocytes. It is covered by the serosa except where the gallbladder is embedded in the liver
The gallbladder differs histologically from the rest of the gastrointestinal tract in that it lacks a muscularis mucosa and submucosa
Blood supply
Arterial supply
The cystic artery that supplies the gallbladder is usually a branch of the right hepatic artery
The course of the cystic artery may vary, but it nearly always is found within the hepatocystic triangle, the area bound by the cystic duct, common hepatic duct, and the liver margin (triangle of Calot
When the cystic artery reaches the neck of the gallbladder, it divides into anterior and posterior divisions
Venous drainage
Venous return is carried either through small veins that enter directly into the liver, or rarely to a large cystic vein that carries blood back to the portal vein
Lymphatic drainage
Gallbladder lymphatics drain into nodes at the neck of the gallbladder called calot,s node
Frequently, a visible lymph node overlies the insertion of the cystic artery into the gallbladder wall
Nerve supply
The nerves of the gallbladder arise from the vagus and from sympathetic branches that pass through the celiac plexus
The preganglionic sympathetic level is thoracic T 8 and T9. Impulses from the liver, gallbladder, and the bile ducts pass by means of sympathetic afferent fibers through
the splanchnic nerves and mediate the pain of biliary colic
The hepatic branch of the vagus nerve supplies cholinergic fibers to the gallbladder, bile ducts, and the liver
The vagal branches also have peptide-containing nerves containing agents such as substance P. somatostatin, enkephalins, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide
Gall stone formation
Causes and types
Certain conditions predispose to the development of gallstones as
Obesity
Pregnancy
Dietary factors
Crohn's disease
Terminal ileal resection
Gastric surgery
Hereditary spherocytosis Sickle cell disease
Thalassemia
All associated with an increased risk of developing
gallstones
Clinical features
Most patients will remain asymptomatic from their gallstones throughout life but few patients may develop complications without previous biliary symptoms
Gallstones in patients without biliary symptoms are commonly diagnosed incidentally on ultrasonography, CT scans, abdominal
radiography, or at laparotomy
Some patients progress to a symptomatic stage, with biliary colic caused by a stone obstructing the cystic duct
Complications
Acute and chronic cholecystitis
Mucocel or empyema of gall bladder
Obstructive jaundice and secondary biliary cirrhosis
Mirizzi,s syndrome rare it is due to partial obstruction of common hepatic duct due to a stone impacted in the cystic duct or hartmann,s pouch episodes of cholangitis and obstructive jaundice occur where stone eroded into the common hepatic duct forming s a single cavity and result in obstructive jaundice at surgery the common hepatic duct may be mistake for cystic duct and ligated
Chronic peptic ulcer due to reflex pylorospasm and gastric stasis
acute cholecystitis choledocholithiasis (stone in common bile duct) with or without cholangitis
gallstone pancreatitis cholecystocholedochal fistula between gall bladder and common bile duct
cholecystoduodenal fistula between gall bladder and duodenum
cholecystoenteric fistula between gall bladder and intestine leading to gallstone ileus may causes intestinal obstruction
gallbladder carcinoma very rare
Gall stone Formation
Gallstones form as a result of solids settling out of solution
The major organic solutes in bile are bilirubin, bile salts, phospholipids, and cholesterol
Classification
Gallstones are classified by their cholesterol content as either
- cholesterol stones
- pigment stones either black or brown
about 80% of gallstones are cholesterol stones and about 15to 20% are black pigment stones
Brown pigment stones account for only a small percentage
There are two types type I cholesterol more than 70 % cholesterol by weight
Type II pure cholesterol
Type I
- Most common about 90%
- Most of these cholesterol stones contain variable amounts of bile pigments and calcium and has the following characters
- usually multiple
- variable size may less than 2.5 cm
- irregular, mulberry shaped may be hard and faceted and soft
- Colour yellowish
- Plain X rays 10% are radio-opaque which mean appear or seen on X rays and they appear as signet ring appearance
- Site of formation gall bladder
- Causes mainly due to infection
- Pure cholesterol stones or type II are uncommon and account for less than10% of all stones
- They usually occur as single large stones with smooth surfaces
- May be rounded and mamillated
- Plain X rays they are radiolucent which mean they not appear or seen on X rays
- Size may more than 2.5 cm
- Colour yellow
- Site of formation gall bladder
- Causes mainly metabolic
- Most cholesterol stones are radiolucent which mean can not appear or seen on plain X rays less than 10% are radiopaque whether pure or of mixed nature in contrast to renal stone which more than 90% radiopaque which mean can appear and seen on plain X rays
Methods of stone formation
the common primary event in the formation of cholesterol stones is supersaturation of bile with cholesterol (lithogenic bile) due to disturbed bile salts |cholesterol ratio
Therefore high bile cholesterol levels and cholesterol gallstones are considered as one disease
Cholesterol is highly nonpolar and insoluble in water and bile
Cholesterol solubility depends on the relative concentration of cholesterol, bile salts, and lecithin (the main phospholipid in bile
Supersaturation almost always is caused by cholesterol
hypersecretion rather than by a reduced secretion of phospholipid or bile salts
Cholesterol is secreted into bile as cholesterol-phospholipid vesicles
Cholesterol is secreted into bile as cholesterol-phospholipid vesicles
Cholesterol is held in solution by micelles, a conjugated bile salt-phospholipid cholesterol complex, as well as by the cholesterol phospholipid vesicles
The presence of vesicles and micelles in the
same aqueous compartment allows the movement of lipids between the two
same aqueous compartment allows the movement of lipids between the two
Vesicular maturation occurs when vesicular lipids are incorporated into micelles
Vesicular phospholipids are incorporated into micelles more readily than vesicular cholesterol
Therefore vesicles may become enriched in cholesterol, become unstable, and nucleate cholesterol crystals. In unsaturated bile, cholesterol enrichment of vesicles is inconsequential
In the supersaturated bile, cholesterol-dense zones develop on the surface of the cholesterol enriched vesicles, leading to the appearance of cholesterol crystals
These events can be seen in the following conditions
Decreased in bile salt pool as in
- Malabsorption any causes interfering with reabsorption of bile salts as in removal of terminal ileum in right hemicolectomy crohn,s disease diabetes
- Estrogen reduce the concentration of bile salts in bile
- Hypercholesolaemia
- Oral contraceptive and estrogen
- Repeated pregnancy due to relaxin hormone
- After trunkal vagotomy operation
- Long term parenteral nutrition
- Obesity
- Diabetes mellitus
Black and brown
Pigment stones contain less than 20% cholesterol and are dark because of the presence of calcium bilirubinate
Black pigment stones
- Are usually small, brittle, black, and some times spiculated
- They are formed by supersaturation of calcium bilirubinatecarbonate, and phosphate
- most often secondary to hemolytic disorders such as hereditary spherocytosis and sickle cell disease
- Associated with liver cirrhosis
- like cholesterol stones, they almost always form in the gallbladder
Unconjugated bilirubin is much less soluble than conjugated bilirubin in bile
Deconjugation of bilirubin occurs normally in bile at a slow rate. Excessive levels of conjugated bilirubin rate of production of unconjugated bilirubin
Liver cirrhosis may lead to increased secretion of unconjugated bilirubin. When altered conditions lead to increased levels of deconjugated bilirubin in bile
Brown stones
- Are usually less than 1 cm in diameter, brownish yellow, soft
- Often mushy and laminated
- They may form either in the gallbladder or in the bile ducts
- Usually secondary to bacterial infection caused by bile stasis
Precipitated calcium bilirubinate and bacterial cell bodies compose the major part of the stone
Bacteria such as Escherichia coli secrete beta-glucuronidase that enzymatically cleaves bilirubin glucuronide to produce the insoluble unconjugated bilirubin
It precipitates with calcium, and along with dead bacterial cell bodies, forms soft brown stones in the biliary tree
Brown stones may associated with stasis secondary to parasite infection it may occur as primary bile duct stones in patients with biliary strictures or other common bile duct stones that cause stasis and bacterial contamination
See more http://healthhomeup.com/chronic-cholecystitis-causes-diagnosis-treatment/
For more investigations see here
For treatment see here
You can see also
tags:gallbladder,stones,explaining
Brown stones may associated with stasis secondary to parasite infection it may occur as primary bile duct stones in patients with biliary strictures or other common bile duct stones that cause stasis and bacterial contamination
See more http://healthhomeup.com/chronic-cholecystitis-causes-diagnosis-treatment/
For more investigations see here
For treatment see here
You can see also
- Gallbladder anatomy
- Biliary duct anatomy including the common bile duct common hepatic duct and its branches and cystic duct anatomy
- Diagnosis or investigations of biliary channels
- Gallbladder function
- Gallbladder stones causes types diagnosis and treatment
- Acute cholecystitis causes types diagnosis and treatment
- Chronic cholecystitis causes types diagnosis and treatment
- Acaclular or non calcular cholecystitis causes diagnosis and treatment
- Ascending cholangitis causes diagnosis and treatment
- Sclerosing cholangitis types causes diagnosis and treatment
- Gallbladder cancer causes diagnosis and treatment
- Bile duct cancer or cholangiocarcinoma causes diagnosis and treatment
- Bile duct cysts or choledochal cysts causes types diagnosis and treatment
- Bile ducts injury or strictures causes types diagnosis and treatment
- Problems after gall bladder removal or postcholecystectomy complications
tags:gallbladder,stones,explaining
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