AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study analyzed the clinical characteristics of 110 patients with primary gallbladder carcinoma, finding that only 8.2% were diagnosed early.
  • - Most patients were females aged 31 to 80, with common clinical signs being non-specific, leading to reliance on imaging for diagnosis.
  • - Out of the patients, 57 underwent radical resection, while 41 had palliative surgery; however, the prognosis was poor, with a mean survival of just 196 days for those monitored.

Article Abstract

Objective: To investigate the clinical characteristics of primary gallbladder carcinoma.

Methods: The data of clinical manifestations, image characteristics, diagnosis and treatment of 110 patients with primary gallbladder carcinoma were analyzed.

Results: The rate of diagnosis as early primary gallbladder carcinoma was only 8.2% (9/110) in this series. The majority of the patients were females (63/110) with an age ranging from 31 to 80 years. Clinical manifestations were not specific, and diagnosis was made mainly on image examination. Radical resection was performed for 57 patients, palliative resection for 41, the rest 12 patients failed to receive operation on reasons of distant metastasis, age or other reasons. Only 88 patients were followed with a mean survival time of 196 days ranging from 15 days to 5 years and 11 months.

Conclusion: The primary gallbladder carcinoma is quite difficult to diagnose at the early stage, and its prognosis is usually poor. The diagnosis is made mainly depending on the medical history and image examinations.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

primary gallbladder
20
gallbladder carcinoma
12
110 patients
8
patients primary
8
clinical manifestations
8
patients
6
primary
5
gallbladder
5
[clinical analysis
4
analysis 110
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!