Abstract
Introduction: Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy, the gold standard for management of gall stone disease, has a conversion rate of 1.6%-20% at different centers. We audited our elective laparoscopic cholecystectomies, to enable preoperative prediction of the probability of conversion. Method: Retrospective audit of all laparoscopic cholecystectomies from Jan 2013 to March 2017 was done. The cases that required conversion to open cholecystectomy were evaluated for pre- and intraoperative factors responsible for conversion and statistically analyzed using SPSS version 23 [IBM, USA]. Results: 764 patients (mean age 42.9 years) were taken up for laparoscopic cholecystectomies of which 33(4.31%) were converted to open cholecystectomy. The operative factors responsible for conversion were: (1) the presence of dense pericholecystic adhesions (P 60y (P=0.032), male sex (P=0.17), history of fever (P Conclusion: Male sex, Age>60years, history of fever with pain, Mirrizi's syndrome, prior ERCP, ultrasound finding of a contracted gallbladder, thick walled gallbladder, and/or stone impaction at neck of gallbladder, significantly predispose to conversion at laparoscopic cholecystectomy. These preoperative factors translate intra-operatively into an unclear anatomy (suggesting that recurrence of inflammation causes increased fibrosis and unclear anatomy at Calot's) predisposing to a higher conversion rate.
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