Curtis Peery MD Sanford Health Surgical Associates Sioux Falls SD 605-328-3840 [email protected] Diseases of the

COMMON ISSUES HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS WILL SEE!!!

OBJECTIVES

 Discuss Biliary Anatomy and Physiology  Discuss Benign  Identify and diagnose common biliary conditions  Clinical Scenarios  Update in surgical treatment Purpose of

 Aids in Digestion  Bile salts aid in fat and fatty vitamin absorption  Optimizes pancreatic enzyme function  Eliminates Waste  Cholesterol  Bilirubin  Inhibits bacterial growth in small bowel  Neutralizes stomach acid in the Biliary Anatomy Gallbladder Function

 Storage for Bile Between Meals  Concentrates Bile  Contracts after meals so adequate bile is available for digestion  CCK is released from the duodenum in response to a meal which causes the gallbladder to contract

- Cholesterol or pigment stones from bilirubin  Cholelithiasis- gallstones in the gallbladder  - pain secondary to obstruction of the gallbladder or biliary tree  Choledocholithiasis – presence of a in the CBD or CHD  - Inflammation of the gallbladder secondary to a stone stuck in the neck of the gallbladder  Cholangitis- infection in the biliary tree secondary to CBD stone(May result in Jaundice)  Gallstone - pancreatitis secondary to stones passing into the distal CBD  Biliary - disfunction of gallbladder contraction resulting in biliary colic GALLSTONES

 Typically form in the gallbladder secondary to the concentration of bile  Cholesterol stones

 80% of all gallstones

 The 4 Fs  Pigment stones

 Bilirubin

 Increased turn over of hemoglobin

 E. coli

CHOLELITHIASIS

 The presence of gallstones within the gallbladder  Incidence 15-20%  Frequently are asymptomatic  20% of incidentally found gallstones develop symptoms Complications of G a l l s t o n e s

 Biliary Colic  Chronic Cholecystisis  Biliary Dyskinesia  Acute Cholecystisis  Pain greater than 6 hours  Empyema/Gangrene/Perforation  Hydrops  Requires Urgent Surgical Consultation  Choledocholithiasis  Painful Jaundice   Gallstone Pancreatitis G A L L S T O N E

 Rare  Fistula between gallbladder and small bowel  Presents as a  May require 2 surgeries ASCENDING CHOLANGITIS

 Charcot’s Triad  Pain  Jaundice  Fever  Reynold’s Pentad  Hypotension  Altered Mental Status  Indication of sepsis  Requires biliary decompression prior to surgery  ERCP  IR drainage CLINICAL SYMPTOMS

 Pain  Very nonspecific  Significant variability   Long differential  Vomiting  Common things are common   Should prompt a basic  Bloating evaluation  Dark Urine  LFTs  U/S  Clay colored stools  +/- additional testing  EKG  Trial of acid blocker ULTRASOUND FINDINGS

 Gall Stones  Thickened Gallbladder Wall  Pericholecystic fluid  Dilated gallbladder  Sludge  Murphy’s Sign Clinical Scenario #1

 40yo Hispanic female  6 months of RUQ pain with nausea and occasionally loose stool  Sx occur after meals occasionally and sometimes at night  She has 3 children  Otherwise healthy but bmi of 38  Only medication is oral contraceptive Clinical Scenario #1

 40yo Hispanic female  6 months of RUQ pain with nausea and occasionally loose stool  Sx occur after meals occasionally and sometimes at night  She has 3 children  Otherwise healthy but bmi of 38  Only medication is oral contraceptive HIDA SCAN Findings of Gallbladder Disease

 Non visualization of gallbladder  Acute cholecystitis or Hydrops  Delayed Filling of gallbladder  Chronic Cholecystitis  Ejection Fraction  Low= Biliary Dyskinesia  High(greater than 80%)= Hyperkinetic Biliary Dyskinesia Clinical Scenario #2

 51yo white male  Presents to the ER with epigastric pain  Has had several times before  Radiated to chest  EKG was negative  CT was normal  Resolved after several hours with pain medication  On medication for HTN and elevated cholesterol  Overweight  Stress Test is negative Clinical Scenario #2

Ultrasound shows a , CBD mildly dilated LFTs-Normal except mildly elevated AST, ALT, Alk. Phos. Clinical Scenario #3

 28yo Hipster leaving to go to PERU in 2 weeks

 Presents to the ER with severe episode of RUQ pain with radiation to the back plus N/V

 Never drinks but daily Marijuana use

 Family History of Gallstones

 US positive form multiple stones

 Alk. Phos. Mildly elevated

 Lipase-370

 Pain resolve in ER after 2 hours with narcotics

 He wants to go home for outpatient follow up Update in Surgical Removal of

 Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy  Replaced open cholecystectomy  Safe  Small but real risk of Injury(BDI)  3-10xs greater than Open Surgery  Attempt at decreasing BDI has not improved the rate in over 30 years  Routine intraoperative cholangiograms  Critical view of saftey  252 patients with bile duct  “… what is needed is injury analyzed a simpler method of  97% of injuries-error in locating the course of visual perception the ductal system  3% errors were technical during the operation, skill something simpler  Only 25% injuries were than recognized at the index cholangiography or operation ultrasonography.” FLUORESCENT CHOLANGIOGRAPHY

 Cheat Code

 Cheap

 ICG around $30

 No need for IOC($700- 800)

 Safe

 Iodine Allergy?

 Saves Time

 Does not answer question if patient has Choledocholithiasis

 Available technology on robotic and laparoscopic platforms

Curtis Peery MD Sanford Health Surgical Associates Sioux Falls SD 605-328-3840 [email protected] https://vimeo.com/user65254991