Describe the Acute acalculous cholecystitis.
an acute life-threatening necroinflammatory disorder of the gallbladder, usually seen in critically ill patients, that is not associated with gallstones
How common is it?
5–10% of acute cholecystitis
List risk factors.
conditions predisposing to bile stasis and reduced perfusion of the gallbladder
Risk factors
Multiorgan failure (critically ill patients)
Severe trauma, burns
Surgery
Infection (e.g., CMV)
Sepsis, septic shock
Total parenteral nutrition
Prolonged fasting
Immunodeficiency
What are clinical features?
similar to acute calculous cholecystitis
List diagnostics.
Laboratory studies and findings: similar to acute calculous cholecystitis
Imaging [8][9]
Abdominal ultrasound: preferred initial imaging modality [7][9]
Supportive findings
Signs of gallbladder inflammation: gallbladder wall thickening (> 3–5 mm), pericholecystic fluid
No evidence of cholelithiasis (sludge may be present)
HIDA scan: preferred confirmatory imaging modality if ultrasound is inconclusive [2][8][9]
Supportive findings: similar to acute calculous cholecystitis (see HIDA scan in “Diagnostics” section)
CT abdomen with IV contrast: an alternative to HIDA in patients with inconclusive ultrasound findings
Supportive findings: similar to those on ultrasound
Describe the treatment.
Initial supportive management: NPO, IV fluids, analgesics (see ''Treatment'' in ''Acute calculous cholecystitis” for details)
IV antibiotics: see “Empiric antibiotic therapy for acute biliary infection”
Source control
Low-risk patients: emergency laparoscopic cholecystectomy
High-risk patients: percutaneous cholecystostomy
If patients do not improve within 2–3 days, cholecystectomy should be performed.
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