Describe the initial treatment.
Empiric antibiotic therapy and cholecystectomy are the mainstays of treatment for acute cholecystitis after initial supportive therapy.
Screen patients for signs of sepsis or shock.
Start empiric antibiotic therapy for acute biliary infection.
Provide initial supportive therapy for acute biliary disease.
Consult general surgery to determine:
Surgical risk.
Definitive management based on severity grading of acute cholecystitis and risk of complications .
Identify and treat concurrent choledocholithiasis
Describe the definitive management.
The initial procedure and duration of antibiotic therapy depend on severity grading of acute cholecystitis, patient's individual surgical risk, and presence of complications.
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Preferred approach if expertise is available
Perform as soon as possible, unless operative and anesthesia risks outweigh the benefits of urgent surgery.
Gallbladder drainage procedures (e.g., percutaneous cholecystostomy) typically performed as a temporizing measure for:
Unstable or clinically deteriorating patients: e.g., grade II–III acute cholecystitis
Frail patients or those at high risk of surgical complications
Perform preoperative or postoperative stone extraction in patients with concurrent choledocholithiasis.
Describe the treatment of grade I acute cholecystitis.
Low surgical risk
Early laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Postoperative antibiotics not required
High surgical risk
Early intervention
Discontinue antibiotics 24 hours after surgery.
OR conservative approach
Continue antibiotics until symptomatic improvement
Arrange interval cholecystectomy
Describe the treatment of grade II acute cholecystitis.
Improvement with initial management
High surgical risk :
Continue antibiotics until symptomatic improvement.
Deterioration despite initial management
Urgent gallbladder drainage followed by interval cholecystectomy
Continue antibiotics for a total of 7 days
Describe the treatment of grade III acute cholecystitis.
Early laparoscopic cholecystectomy if there is an adequate response to initial supportive care
Continue antibiotics for 4–7 days after surgery.
Urgent gallbladder drainage, followed by:
Interval cholecystectomy
OR observation
Continue antibiotics for a total of 7 days.
Describe the procedure of laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Indication: gold standard of treatment for acute calculous cholecystitis [22]
Timing: depends on surgical and anesthesia risks, disease severity, and symptom duration
Early laparoscopic cholecystectomy: performed within 10 days of symptom onset; preferably within the initial 24–72 hours [22][24]
Indication: symptom duration of ≤ 10 days in patients with low surgical and anesthesia risk(s) [22]
Contraindications
High surgical or anesthesia risks
Symptom duration > 10 days
Interval laparoscopic cholecystectomy (delayed lap. chole)
Performed 45 days after resolution of symptoms [22]
Indications
High surgical or anesthesia risk
Describe gallbladder drainage.
Indication: temporizing, minimally invasive measures in high surgical-risk patients not responding to conservative management
Contraindication: uncontrolled bleeding diathesis
Options
Percutaneous cholecystostomy: image-guided placement of a catheter (cholecystostomy tube) into the gallbladder under local anesthesia through the abdominal wall to provide biliary drainage
Endoscopic gallbladder stenting: may be preferred over percutaneous cholecystostomy if endoscopy operator expertise is available as it is less invasive
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