AI Article Synopsis

  • * A 15-year-old boy experienced biliary calculosis and non-conjugated hyperbilirubinemia, with a history of mild bilirubin elevation and gallstones related to hereditary ellyptocytosis and Gilbert's syndrome.
  • * The study concludes that Gilbert's syndrome can significantly contribute to biliary stones in children with chronic mild hemolytic conditions, suggesting that these associations should be considered in similar cases.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Biliary calculosis is rare in children. It occurs associated with different haemolytic and non-haemolytic disorders, which are sometimes also combined.

Case Outline: A 15-year-old male was hospitalized due to biliary calculosis and non-conjugated hyperbilirubinemia. A mild non-conjugated hyperbilirubinemia, without anaemia and other symptoms of liver dysfunction, was registered at age 8 years, and 7 years later cholelithiasis with transitory choledocholithiasis. The finding of ellyptocytes in blood smear, which was also verified in mother, normal haemoglobin count and the absence of diseases followed by secondary dysmorphic erythrocytes of this type, indicated a clinically milder (compensated) hereditary ellyptocytosis, while more than a double increase of non-conjugated serum bilirubin fracture after a three-day hypocaloric diet (400 kcal per day) showed the concurrent presence of Gilbert's syndrome. In the laparascopically removed gallbladder a larger number of small pigmented calculi were disclosed.

Conclusion: Gilbert's syndrome is an essential precipitating factor of biliary calculosis in patients with chronic haemolytic condition. Thus, in all cases of biliary calculosis and non-conjugated hyperbilirubinemia with absent clinical and laboratory parameters of liver disorders and anaemia, except in compensated haemolytic disease and Gilbert's syndrome as isolated disorders, a possibility of their association should be taken into consideration.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/sarh1106386rDOI Listing

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