Refers to the formation of hard stones in the gallbladder
Aetiology
Risk factors
- 'Fair, fat, fertile, female and forty'
- Other risk factors include:
- Increasing age
- Positive family history
- Loss of bile salts e.g. Crohn's
- Diabetes
- Dysmotility of gall bladder
- Prolonged fasting
- TPN
Pathophysiology
- Cholesterol gallstones (10%) develop when bile contains too much cholesterol and not enough bile salts - bile stasis, excess cholesterol
- Pigment stones (10%) are caused by excess bilirubin
- 80% of gallstones are mixed - pigment and cholesterol
Clinical presentation
- Vast majority of people with gallstones are asymptomatic
- Some may experience nausea, early satiety and bloating
- Each year 1-4% of people with gallstones will have an acute presentation - 60% biliary colic, 40% acute cholecystitis
Management
- Depends on nature of presentation