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ANATOMY OF A
GALLSTONE
55-year
old accountant, woke up one morning not long ago with terrible pains
in his upper abdomen and right shoulder. Positive he was having a
heart attack, he rushed off to the emergency room. But alas...his
problem was far less dramatic and, fortunately, less critical. The
culprit? Gallstones.
Though it's estimated that more than have gallstones,
relatively few know it. Usually lying dormant for years, they can be
extremely painful, even dangerous, if they become symptomatic.
THE ANATOMY LESSON
To
understand gallstones, an anatomy lesson is helpful. The gallbladder
is a small, pear-shaped organ that is part of the digestive tract.
Located on the right side of the abdomen below your liver, the
gallbladder stores and secretes bile (produced in the liver) into
your small intestine when food arrives there from your stomach.
Bile, a yellow-brownish fluid, helps digest fats in food.
Gallstones form when substances in the bile crystallize, or harden.
There are two types of gallstones:
Cholesterol
gallstones -
Made mostly of cholesterol, they comprise about 80% of gallstones.
Pigment
gallstones -
Made mostly of bilirubin and calcium salts, they account for the
remaining 20% of gallstones.
Generally white, yellow or brownish in color, gallstones can be as
small as a grain of sand, or as large as a golf ball (though smaller
gallstones are much more common). Some people will develop only one
or a few larger gallstones, while others can develop hundreds of
smaller ones.
WHAT CAUSES GALLSTONES ?
Though
scientists do not yet understand exactly how gallstones occur, a
number of factors are known to contribute to their formation:
Body chemistry - specifically, when the bile contains too high a
concentration of cholesterol and too low a concentration of bile
salts.
Efficiency - how efficient your gallbladder is at contracting and
flushing bile.
Proteins - an improper balance of different types of proteins in the
liver or bile may make you more susceptible to gallstones.
Obesity - being overweight may make you more susceptible to
gallstones, probably because it exacerbates the factors listed
above.
Weight loss - the process of losing weight (especially losing weight
rapidly) may also make you more susceptible to gallstones, again
probably because it exacerbates the factors listed above. (Note:
virtually all medical professionals agree that gradual weight loss
is highly beneficial to your health, even if it may raise your
susceptibility to gallstones.)
Estrogen levels - In women, increased estrogen levels due to
pregnancy, birth control pills or hormone therapy may increase the
risk of gallstones.
WHAT DOES IT FEEL LIKE TO HAVE
GALLSTONES ?
As noted,
people who develop gallstones generally don't experience any
symptoms for years, and many never develop any symptoms. However, if
you do experience a gallstone attack, the symptoms can be severe,
and sometimes dangerous. Usually experienced as severe pain in the
upper abdomen, upper back or right shoulder, gallstone attacks can
last anywhere from 20 minutes to a number of hours, and are often
accompanied by nausea and vomiting. Once they occur, attacks may
recur very frequently (weeks or months apart) or infrequently (a
year or years apart). If you do experience a gallbladder attack,
you're likely to have another at some point.
Although very painful, gallstone attacks are usually not life
threatening as long as the gallstones remain in the gallbladder.
However, if the gallstones migrate out of the gallbladder, serious
problems can develop:
If gallstones migrate and block the duct draining the gallbladder
into the small intestine, cholecystitis (inflammation of the
gallbladder) can result.
If gallstones migrate and block the main duct between the liver and
the intestine, jaundice and/or pancreatitis (inflammation of the
pancreas) can result.
If these complications do develop, and are left untreated, they can
be fatal.
HOW ARE THEY DIAGNOSED ?
Since
asymptomatic gallstones are seldom treated, physicians rarely test
for gallstones. However, when symptoms do occur and gallstones are
suspected, an ultrasound is generally performed. These devices send
sound waves into the abdomen, and if gallstones are present, the
waves will bounce back, showing the location of the stones.
GALLSTONE TREATMENT VARIES
Once
gallstones become symptomatic and are diagnosed, they can be treated
in a number of ways.
SURGERY
At present,
the most common treatment for gallstones is a cholecystectomy—surgery
to remove the gallbladder. Until recently, this was done through
open surgery; a large incision was made into the abdomen to remove
the gallbladder. Today, however, the majority of cholecystectomies
are performed via laparoscopic surgery. Small incisions are made in
the abdomen, and a small camera and surgical tools are then passed
through these incisions. Watching on a TV monitor, the surgeon
removes the gallbladder, and sutures the internal and external
incisions.
Like open surgery, a laparoscopic cholecystectomy is performed under
general anesthesia. However, unlike open surgery, the laparoscopic
method requires only small incisions, and no cutting of abdominal
muscles. As a result, the laparoscopic method causes much less
post-operative pain than open surgery, as well as less
hospitalization time (overnight compared to several days) and less
recuperation time (a few days compared to at least a week).
There are situations when an open cholecystectomy is preferred over
the laparoscopic method. who specializes in hepatobiliary and
transplant surgery at Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center,
explains: "Open cholecystectomies are preferred when the
patient has had numerous previous abdominal surgeries, when the
patient has a known gangrenous gallbladder, when a patient has
cirrhosis, or for patients in whom the anatomy of the bile duct is
unclear."
NON SURGICAL METHODS
Although
much less common, there are non-surgical methods available to treat
gallstones. They are only used for cholesterol gallstones.
In oral dissolution therapy you would be asked to ingest medications
made from bile acids to dissolve gallstones. Generally lasting
anywhere from a few months to a few years, this therapy is usually
only prescribed for those patients with very small, cholesterol-type
gallstones, since patients with large gallstones often suffer
recurrence of symptoms after this therapy.
Contact dissolution therapy involves introducing and removing a
gallstone-dissolving agent into the gallbladder through a catheter
that is attached to a pump. Lasting hours or days, this type of
gallstone treatment is generally limited to those patients for whom
any type of surgery poses high risk.
Shock wave therapy, which is relatively new, destroys gallstones by
administering a shock wave through the abdomen into the gallbladder.
Like oral dissolution treatment, shock wave treatment is limited to
patients with few and small gallstones since patients with multiple
and/or large gallstones often experience recurrence after treatment.
WHO SHOULD BE TESTED FOR
GALLSTONES ?
In the
absence of symptoms, there's generally little purpose for the
average person to be tested for gallstones since they are usually
not treated unless they become symptomatic. However, if you do
experience the type of pain common to gallstones described above,
then you should be tested. In addition, if you show evidence of
jaundice or any trouble with your pancreas, you should seek medical
attention immediately, which should include testing for gallstones.
Are you likely to get gallstones? Anyone can develop them, however,
those most susceptible are:
Women, especially between the ages of 20 and 60, and women who are
pregnant, use birth control pills, or receive estrogen hormone
therapy (Women are twice as likely to develop gallstones as men.)
Men
and women who are over age 60 or who are overweight.
People
who diet, especially those who diet frequently and/or who lose
weight quickly (either due to diet or other causes, such as illness
or non-gallstone-related surgery).
People
who experienced rapid weight loss or fasting.
People
with diabetes.
People
who are taking cholesterol-lowering drugs
LIFE WITHOUT GALLBLADDER
Can you
live without your gallbladder? Absolutely. As explains, the
gallbladder simply functions as a storage area for bile, squirting
bile into the small intestines when we eat to help digest the food.
Without a gallbladder, bile simply drains directly into the small
intestines from the liver at a steady rate all day. Indeed,
notes, "We don't really need a gallbladder at all." But
two side effects of not having a gallbladder may include increased
instances of diarrhea and higher levels of blood cholesterol.
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