Abstract

Cholecystectomy for symptomatic cholecystitis is one of the common surgical procedures in the geriatric patients. Increased gallbladder wall thickness is expected due to acute cholecystitis and in some other clinical conditions. Routine histopathological evaluation of cholecystectomy materials are required to confirm the diagnosis and document other pathologies. The aim of this study was to evaluate age-related histopathological gallbladder morphometric measurements. A retrospective chart review of 371 cholecystectomy materials was performed. Two groups were designed according to age (<65 and ≥65years old, respectively). Age and gender analyses for histopathological gallbladder length, diameter and wall thickness were performed. In addition, pathologically confirmed acute inflammation rates were evaluated in this case-control study. Gallbladder morphometric measurements and pathologically confirmed acute inflammation rates were similar in males and females. Histopathological gallbladder diameter was higher with acute inflammatory changes, but no differences were observed in gallbladder length and wall thickness. Gallbladder wall thickness and pathologically confirmed acute inflammation rates were not comparable between the control and geriatric patients (2.8±1.3 vs 2.6±1.2mm, and 30/281 (10.7%) vs 10/74 (13.5%), respectively, p>0.05). However, higher gallbladder length and diameter were observed in geriatric group. Age is an independent factor on histopathological gallbladder length and diameter, but not for gallbladder wall thickness. In addition, pathologically confirmed acute inflammation rate is not higher in geriatric patients. Clinical significance of these findings merits further investigation.

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