Abstract

This study examined cholesterol and mixed gallstone dissolution in vitro by methyl-tert-butyl ether (MTBE) after gallstone fragmentation. Three morphologically identical gallstones were obtained from 42 patients. One stone from each patient was fragmented with laser energy at a wavelength of 504 nm delivered to the stone surface with a 320-microns quartz fiber. Intact and fragmented stones from the same patient were incubated without stirring in MTBE and dissolution was expressed as the percent of initial stone weight remaining after 2 hr. Stone composition did not correlate with the amount of laser energy required for stone fragmentation. Fragmented stones dissolved faster than intact stones in MTBE with 13.97% +/- 0.37% vs 31.0% +/- 0.51% respectively (mean +/- SEM) of initial stone weight remaining at 2 hr (P less than 0.0001). Initial stone weight and stone matrix content significantly predicted dissolution of intact (P = 0.0033 and P = 0.0483, respectively) and fragmented stones (P = 0.003 and P = 0.0001, respectively) in MTBE. These data suggest that the gallstone matrix may inhibit stone dissolution even after stone fragmentation.

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