Training vs practice: A tale of opposition in acute cholecystitis.

World J Hepatol

Purvi P Patel, Shaun C Daly, Jose M Velasco, Department of General Surgery, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, United States.

Published: October 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute cholecystitis is a prevalent surgical issue for general surgeons, but treatment approaches vary despite available evidence suggesting early laparoscopic cholecystectomy leads to better outcomes than delayed methods like antibiotics.
  • Intraoperative imaging techniques, such as cholangiogram and laparoscopic ultrasound, can enhance the safety of cholecystectomy and reduce complications, but these methods are infrequently used in practice.
  • The trend is shifting away from surgeons alone managing bile duct stones, with referrals to gastroenterologists becoming common; however, intraoperative laparoscopic stone removal is recognized as a safe and effective option.

Article Abstract

Acute cholecystitis is one of the most common surgical diagnoses encountered by general surgeons. Despite its high incidence there remains a range of treatment of approaches. Current practices in biliary surgery vary as to timing, intraoperative utilization of biliary imaging, and management of bile duct stones despite growing evidence in the literature defining best practice. Management of patients with acute cholecystitis with early laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) results in better patient outcomes when compared with delayed surgical management techniques including antibiotic therapy or percutaneous cholecystostomy. Regardless of this data, many surgeons still prefer to utilize antibiotic therapy and complete an interval LC to manage acute cholecystitis. The use of intraoperative biliary imaging by cholangiogram or laparoscopic ultrasound has been demonstrated to facilitate the safe completion of cholecystectomy, minimizing the risk for inadvertent injury to surrounding structures, and lowering conversion rates, however it is rarely utilized. Choledocholithiasis used to be a diagnosis managed exclusively by surgeons but current practice favors referral to gastroenterologists for performance of preoperative endoscopic removal. Yet, there is evidence that intraoperative laparoscopic stone extraction is safe, feasible and may have added advantages. This review aims to highlight the differences between existing management of acute cholecystitis and evidence supported in the literature regarding best practice with the goal to change surgical practice to adopt these current recommendations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4606202PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4254/wjh.v7.i23.2470DOI Listing

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