Formation of hard, pebble and stone like structure mainly made up of cholesterol in gall bladder is called cholelithiasis.
Know more about cholelithiasis
2. Cholelithiasis is the
presence of one or more
calculi (gallstones) in the
gallbladder.
Cholelithiasis is the medical
name for hard deposits
(gallstones) that may form
in the gallbladder.
Cholelithiasis is common in
the United States
population. Six percent of
adult men and 10% of adult
women are affected.
3. In cholelithiasis calculi
(gallstone) usually form in
gall bladder from solid
constituents of bile and
vary gently in size and
shape and composition.
Gall stone is result of bile
supersaturation with
cholesterol due to
increases synthesis of
cholesterol and decrease
synthesis of bile acids that
dissolve cholesterol.
4. Typically, there are three
types:
Cholesterol Stones :
Made up of fatty
substances in the
blood, cholesterol is found
throughout the body. These
are the most common type
of gallstones.
5. Pigment Stones
(mainly made of
bilirubin):
This substance is
created when red blood
cells break down in the
liver.
Too much bilirubin can
actually leak into the
bloodstream and cause
the skin and eyes to
turn yellow (jaundice).
6. Mixed gallstones
:
typically contain
20–80%
cholesterol.
Other common
constituents are
calcium carbonate,
palmitate
phosphate,
bilirubin, and other
bile pigments.
7. Your bile contains too much cholesterol. Normally, your bile contains enough
chemicals to dissolve the cholesterol excreted by your liver. But if your liver excretes
more cholesterol than your bile can dissolve, the excess cholesterol may form into
crystals and eventually into stones.
Your bile contains too much bilirubin. Bilirubin is a chemical that’s produced when your
body breaks down red blood cells. The excess bilirubin contributes to gallstone
formation.
Your gallbladder doesn’t empty correctly. If your gallbladder doesn’t empty completely
or often enough, bile may become very concentrated, contributing to the formation of
gallstones.
8. Women
Birth control pills
Pregnancy
A family history
Obesity
Diabetes
Sedentary life style
Liver disease
Rapid weight loss.
9.
10. Symptoms may include:
Pain in your upper belly, often on the right, just under your ribs
Pain in your right shoulder or back
An upset stomach
Vomiting
Other digestive problems, including indigestion, heartburn, and gas
See your doctor or go to the hospital if you have signs of a serious infection
or inflammation:
Belly pain that lasts several hours
Fever and chills
Yellow skin or eyes
Dark urine and light-colored Stool.
11. Ultrasound Most sensitive and specific test for gallstones
Computerized tomography (CT) scan May show gallstones or complications, such
as infection and rupture of GB or bile ducts
Cholescintigraphy (HIDA scan) Used to diagnose abnormal contraction of
gallbladder or obstruction of bile ducts
Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) Used to locate and
remove stones in bile ducts
Blood tests Performed to look for signs of infection, obstruction, pancreatitis, or
jaundice
12. Inflammation of the gallbladder (acute cholecystitis): If a bile duct becomes
permanently blocked, it can lead to a build-up of bile inside the gallbladder. This can
cause the gallbladder to become infected and inflamed.
Jaundice : You can get jaundice if a gallstone passes out of the gallbladder into the
bile duct and blocks the flow of bile.
Infection of the bile ducts (acute cholangitis): If the bile ducts become blocked,
they're vulnerable to infection by bacteria. The medical term for a bile duct infection is
acute cholangitis.
Acute pancreatitis may develop when a gallstone moves out of the gallbladder and
blocks the opening (duct) of the pancreas, causing it to become inflamed.
Cancer of the gallbladder
13. Medical Manegment :
IV fluids
NPO with NG tube later progressing to low fat diets
Antiemetics to prevent nausea and vomiting
Analgesics to relieve pain
Anticholinergic to decrease secretions which prevents biliary contraction
Antibiotics
14. Surgical
Manegment :
Gallbladder stones cannot
be dissolved and must be
removed surgically.
Cholecystectomy :
Cholecystectomy is the
surgical removal of the
gallbladder.
Cholecystectomy is a
common treatment of
symptomatic gallstones
and other gallbladder
conditions.
15. Percutaneous
cholecystostomy (PC):
A technique that consists
of percutaneous catheter
placement in the
gallbladder lumen under
imaging guidance, has
become an alternative to
surgical cholecystostomy
in recent years.
16. Assisment :
Assess health history : Note history of smoking or prior respiratory problems
Assess respiratory status: Note shallow respirations, persistent cough, or ineffective or
adventitious breath sounds
Evaluate nutritional status ( dietary history, general examination and laboratory study
results).
17. Acute pain & discomfort related to surgical incision.
Impaired gas exchange related to the high abdominal surgical incision
Impaired skin integrity related to altered biliary drainage after surgical intervention
Imbalanced nutrition, less than body requirements, related to inadequate bile
secretion
Deficient knowledge about self-care activities related to incision care, dietary
modifications (if needed), medications, reportable signs or symptoms (eg, fever,
bleeding, vomiting)
18. Postoperative:
Place the patient in the low Fowler’s position.
Provide Intravenous fluids.
Provide water and other fluids and soft diet is started when bowel sounds return.
Relieving pain:
Administer analgesic agents as prescribed to relieve the pain.
Help the patient to turn, cough, breathe deeply, and ambulate as indicated.
Use of a pillow or binder over the incision during these maneuvers.
19. Improving respiratory status
Remind patients to take deep breaths and cough every hour to expand the lungs fully
and prevent atelectasis.
Promote early ambulation. Early ambulation prevents pulmonary complications as well
Monitor elderly and obese patients must closely for respiratory problem.
20. Promoting skin care and biliary drainage:
observed for indications of infection, leakage of bile into the peritoneal cavity, and
obstruction of bile drainage, clay colored stool and vital sign.
note and report right upper quadrant abdominal, pain, nausea and vomiting,
Observe for jaundice.
changes frequently the outer dressings and protection of the skin from irritation.
Maintain a careful record of fluid intake and output