Individuals with diabetes mellitus are reported to have a twofold to threefold increase in the incidence of cholesterol gallstones. A frequently cited but unproven pathophysiologic mechanism for this phenomenon is reduced gallbladder muscle function, which results in stasis and allows for cholesterol gallstone crystal formation and gallstone growth. To date, gallbladder motor function has not been investigated in a well-characterized diabetic population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGallbladder emptying and filling was studied in eight diabetic and six normal control patients. None of the patients had gallstones. Cholescintigraphy was performed using [99mTc]disofenin, and gallbladder emptying was studied using a 45-min i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCholescintigraphy with [99mTc] disofenin was used to determine the optimal dose and method of administration of the octapeptide of cholecystokinin, and to determine the kinetics of gallbladder filling and emptying in 22 patients without disease of the liver or gallbladder. The peak filling rate of the gallbladder occurred at 30 min after injection; filling was complete at 1 hr. A 45-min constant intravenous infusion of the octapeptide 20 ng/kg X hr resulted in progressive emptying of the normal gallbladder; the mean ejection fraction at 45 min was 77.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans Am Clin Climatol Assoc
October 1977