Abstract

Biliary sludge is the term applied to the material causing layered ultrasonic echoes in the gall bladder. It may be due to thick or inspissated bile, multiple tiny non-shadowing calculi, pigment granules or cholesterol crystal formation, haemobilia, purulent bile or pus (Conrad et al., 1979; Buschi et al., 1979; Filly et al., 1980). The appearance usually has a medium-to-coarse echo pattern, shows a horizontal fluid/fluid interface, no acoustic shadowing and being gravity-dependent moves when the patient assumes an oblique or lateral decubitus position (Anderson and Harned, 1977; Conrad et al., 1979; Filly et al., 1980; Leopold et al., 1976). The appearance of biliary sludge may be variable, however; movement under gravity may be very slow (Filly et al., 1980); in empyema of the gall bladder diffuse echogenic densities may fill the gall bladder and show no gravity dependence or layering effect (Kane, 1980). Inspissation of bile in long-standing biliary obstruction may appear as a uniform solid mass lying ...

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