Abstract

Nine cases of acute acalculous cholecystitis were diagnosed in the surgical intensive care unit at Hartford Hospital during a 2 year period after abdominal, cardiovascular, and traumatic surgery. A tender mass in the right upper quadrant was suggestive but not diagnostic of the condition. Hyperamylasemia was seen in all patients. Ultrasonography is the most useful diagnostic tool; serial studies reveal progressive gallbladder dilatation and edema. Tube cholecystostomy was used in five patients and cholecystectomy in four. Cholecystostomy led to resolution of the inflammatory process in all five patients. Cholecystectomy should be reserved for those patients with extensive gallbladder necrosis. Six of the nine patients in the series died, all from multiple systems failure with concomitant sepsis. Hypotension is probably central to the development of acute acalculous cholecystitis. In the face of elevated intraluminal gallbladder pressure caused by ampullary edema and increased bile viscosity, hypotension may result in mucosal ischemia and necrosis with subsequent bacterial colonization. Acute acalculous cholecystitis represents another organ failure in critically ill patients who are experiencing progressive failure of multiple organ systems. An aggressive approach to the manifestations of organ failure, including acalculous cholecystitis, must be employed.

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