Ultrasound abdomen as a tool to predict difficult cholecystectomy

Authors

  • Sameer Ahmed Mulla Department of Surgery, SDM College of Medical Sciences and Hospital, Dharwad, Karnataka http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9878-5963
  • Srinivas Pai Department of Surgery, SDM College of Medical Sciences and Hospital, Dharwad, Karnataka
  • Dishita Shetty Department of Surgery, SDM College of Medical Sciences and Hospital, Dharwad, Karnataka

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18203/2349-2902.isj20201406

Keywords:

Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic cholecystectomy, Difficult, Ultrasound, Sonography, Gallbladder

Abstract

Background: Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a commonly performed procedure in general surgical practise, which can sometimes be tedious and can have high morbidity. Ultrasound abdomen is a routinely performed radiological investigation for every case of cholecystectomy. This study intends to find correlation between the ultrasound findings and the perceived difficulty during surgery.

Methods: This is a prospective study of 100 patients who underwent cholecystectomy after a preoperative ultrasound. Difficult cholecystectomies were defined and sonographic findings and intraoperative difficulties recorded and tabulated.

Results: Fifty one cholecystectomies were classified as difficult cholecystectomy (20 converted to open procedure and 31 took more than 90 min to complete laparoscopically). The commonest ultrasound finding that was encountered was multiple calculi (62%) followed by gallbladder (GB) wall thickness of >4 mm (33%), stone size >1 cm (22%), contracted GB (17%), intrahepatic biliary radicals (IHBR) dilatation (15%) and the least common finding was empyema of the gallbladder seen in 7% of the cases.

Conclusions: This study is a reflection of surgeries performed by a single team over 3 years which included 100 cases. It was started with an idea to identify the findings on a preoperative ultrasound that predicted a difficult cholecystectomy (laparoscopic or open). In our experience we found that empyema GB, pericholecystic fluid, IHBR dilatation and wall thickness of GB are excellent predictors of a difficult cholecystectomy.

Author Biography

Sameer Ahmed Mulla, Department of Surgery, SDM College of Medical Sciences and Hospital, Dharwad, Karnataka

Associate Professor

Department of General Surgery

SDMCMSH Dharwar, India

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Published

2020-03-26

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Original Research Articles