What Are the Different Gallstone Surgery Complications?
Gallstones, also known as cholelithiasis, refer to diseases in which the biliary system includes stones in the gallbladder or bile ducts; biliary infections are a common disease. Divided into cholecystitis and cholangitis according to the disease site. The formation of stones in the gallbladder can stimulate the gallbladder mucosa, which can not only cause chronic inflammation of the gallbladder, but also can cause secondary infections when the stones are embedded in the neck or gallbladder duct of the gallbladder, leading to acute inflammation of the gallbladder. Chronic stimulation of the gallbladder mucosa by stones can also lead to the occurrence of gallbladder cancer. It has been reported that the incidence of this type of gallbladder cancer can reach 1% to 2%.
Basic Information
Causes of gallstones
- The main causes of gallstones may be:
- 1. Happy and quiet
- Some people have less exercise and physical labor, and the contractility of their gallbladder muscles will inevitably decrease over time. Bile emptying will be delayed, which will easily cause cholestasis and the precipitation of cholesterol crystals, creating conditions for the formation of gallstones.
- 2. Obesity
- Usually like to eat high fat, high sugar, high cholesterol drinks or snacks, and obesity is an important basis for gallstones.
- 3. Don't eat breakfast
- Many people do not eat breakfast in modern times, and long-term absence of breakfast will increase the bile concentration, which is conducive to bacterial reproduction and easy to promote the formation of gallstones. If you insist on eating breakfast, you can promote some bile outflow, reduce the viscosity of bile stored overnight, and reduce the risk of gallstones.
- 4. After-meal snacks
- When a person is in a tortuous position, intra-abdominal pressure increases, gastrointestinal motility is limited, which is not conducive to food digestion and bile excretion. Sitting for a long time after a meal affects the reabsorption of bile acids, causing cholesterol and bile acids in bile. The ratio is out of balance, and cholesterol is easily deposited.
- 5. People with cirrhosis
- This is related to the reduction of estrogen inactivation function in patients with liver cirrhosis. The estrogen inactivation function in the body is reduced, and the estrogen level is higher. In addition, the cystic contraction function of the liver cirrhosis is poor, the gallbladder is empty, and the biliary vein Various factors such as varicose veins and elevated bilirubin in the blood can cause gallstones.
- 6. Genetic factors
- Genetic factors obviously play an important role in determining the risk of gallstones. Gallstones occur more often in close relatives of patients with cholesterol gallstones.
Clinical manifestations of gallstones
- Gallbladder stones
- Its symptoms depend on the size and location of the stones, and the presence or absence of obstruction and inflammation. Some patients with gallbladder stones are asymptomatic for life, so-called recessive stones. Large gallbladder stones can cause dyspnea, discomfort, belching, and anorexia of greasy foods. Smaller stones cause cholestasis and acute cholecystitis every time after a full meal, after eating greasy food, or after lying supine at night. Due to the contraction of the gallbladder, smaller stones may enter the common bile duct through the gallbladder and obstructive jaundice, and then some stones can be discharged from the bile duct into the duodenum, and some stones remain in the bile duct and become secondary bile duct stones. Stones can also obstruct the gallbladder duct for a long time without infection, and only form hydrocystic gallbladder. At this time, you can touch the enlarged gallbladder without obvious tenderness. Gallbladder stones usually have no special signs or mild tenderness in the right upper abdomen when they are not infected. However, when there is an acute infection, tenderness and muscle tension in the mid-upper and right upper quadrants can occur, and sometimes the enlarged and tender gallbladder can be affected.
- 2. Hepatobiliary stones
- Hepatobiliary stones refer to stones in the intrahepatic bile duct system, so it is also called intrahepatic bile duct stones. Often combined with extrahepatic bile duct stones, but there are also simple intrahepatic bile duct stones, also known as true intrahepatic stones. In recent years, there are more and more cases of intrahepatic bile duct stones, and the classification of stones is mostly bilirubin stones. Hepatobiliary stones are mostly composed of yellow-green massive or "sandy" stones, mostly calcium bilirubin. Ascaris eggs can often be found in the calculus center, so some people think that hepatobiliary stones are caused by bile duct obstruction caused by biliary ascaris and bacterial infection.
- Hepatobiliary stones are mostly left hepatic ducts, and the bile ducts at the confluence of the upper and lower left hepatic bile ducts of the liver are slightly enlarged and stones stay there. Right hepatobiliary stones are mostly found in the right posterior lobe bile duct.
- The clinical features are mostly as follows:
- (1) Patients are younger than patients with gallstones, and some patients are associated with congenital abnormalities of the intrahepatic bile ducts. Patients often have a history of recurrent episodes of abdominal pain, chills, fever, and jaundice since childhood.
- (2) Impaired liver function, and gallbladder function may be normal. A variety of liver dysfunction can occur during recurrent episodes, and alkaline phosphatase rises during intermittent periods; chronic disease can lead to liver atrophy and liver fibrosis.
- (3) Abdominal pain, jaundice, and fever are the main symptoms, but typical severe angina rarely occurs.
- (4) Complications are numerous and serious. More common are suppurative intrahepatic cholangitis, liver abscess, and biliary tract bleeding.
- (5) Biliography can show intrahepatic bile duct dilatation without extrahepatic bile duct dilation, and there is a small translucent in the hepatic duct.
Gallstone treatment
- There are many treatment methods for gallstones. At present, there are two main methods for gallstone treatment. One is surgery. The other is non-surgical therapy, that is, symptomatic treatment of traditional Chinese and Western medicine, and traditional Chinese medicine. Both therapies have advantages and disadvantages.
- Gallstone surgery can be divided into general surgery and minimally invasive surgery.
- 1. General surgical treatment
- For some large stones that do not work with drugs, the gallbladder can be directly removed by surgery, which can quickly eradicate the lesion, which is currently the best method. But there are some indications for surgery.
- 2. Minimally invasive surgery
- It is only necessary to make three small incisions of 2 to 3 cm in the abdomen. The operation method is simple, the trauma is small, and the recovery is fast. However, minimally invasive surgery is difficult to remove small stones, and it can also induce stones.