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Adrian A Indar Section of
Gastrointestinal Surgery, University Hospital Nottingham, Nottingham
NG7 2UH Correspondence to: I J Beckingham
Ian.Beckingham@nottingham.ac.uk
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Patients with suspected acute cholecystitis should be referred to hospital and, if the diagnosis is confirmed, early surgery is indicated
Acute cholecystitis
inflammation of the gall
bladder
is most often caused by gall stones. Gall stones are
one of the most common disorders of the gastrointestinal tract,
affecting about 10% of people in Western society.
1 2
More than 80% of people with gall stones are asymptomatic. Acute
cholecystitis develops in 1-3% of patients with symptomatic gall
stones.3
Helminthic infection (ascariasis) is a major cause of biliary disease in developing countries in Asia, southern Africa, and Latin America.4 Obstruction of the cystic duct causes an inflammatory process to start. This results in acute cholecystitis. If the inflammation persists it may cause perforation or gangrene of the gall bladder.
| Table Removed (Available Only in the Full Text) |
Diagnosis of acute cholecystitis is made on the basis of clinical
features and is supported by results of ultrasound scanning. Treatment
is predominantly surgical,
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