Gallstones and Gallbladder Disease - Prognosis

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Prompt surgery can nearly always prevent these complications.

Complications from Choledocholithiasis

When gallstones lodge in the common bile duct (choledocholithiasis) instead of the gallbladder, serious complications can occur.

Infection in the Common Bile Duct (Cholangitis). Infection in the common bile duct (cholangitis) from obstruction is common and serious. Those at highest risk for a poor outlook also have one or more of the following conditions:

  • Kidney failure
  • Liver abscess
  • Cirrhosis
  • Being over 50 years

If antibiotics are administered immediately, the infection clears up in 75% of patients. If cholangitis does not improve, the infection may spread and become life threatening. Either surgery or a procedure known as endoscopic sphincterotomy is required to open and drain the ducts.



Pancreatitis. Choledocholithiasis is responsible for most cases of pancreatitis (inflammation of the pancreas), a condition that can be life threatening. The pancreatic duct, which carries digestive enzymes, joins the common bile duct right before it enters the intestine. It is therefore not unusual for stones that pass through or lodge in the lower portion of the common bile duct to obstruct the pancreatic duct.

Pancreas

Gallbladder Cancer

Gallstones are present in about 80% of people with gallbladder cancer. Symptoms of gallbladder cancer are usually not present until the disease has reached an advanced stage and may include weight loss, anemia, recurrent vomiting, and a lump in the abdomen. When the cancer is caught at an early stage and has not spread deeper than the mucosa (the inner lining), removal of the gallbladder results in five-year survival rates of 68%. If cancer has spread to deeper layers, more extensive surgery or other treatments may be required.

This cancer is very rare, however, even among people with gallstones. Certain conditions in the gallbladder, however, pose a higher than average risk for cancer.

Gallbladder Polyps and Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis. Polyps (growths) are sometimes detected during diagnostic tests for gallbladder disease. Small gallbladder polyps (up to 10 mm) pose little or no risk, but large ones (greater than 15 mm) pose some risk for cancer, so the gallbladder should be removed. Patients with polyps 10 to 15 mm have a lower risk but they should still discuss removal of their gallbladder with their doctor.

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