Gallstone Genesis - Rocking the Ducts
- Core Imbalance: Bile constituents precipitate.
- Types:
-
Cholesterol Stones (~80%):
- Patho: ↑Cholesterol, ↓Bile salts/Lecithin → supersaturation; nucleation; GB stasis.
- Risk: 📌 4 F's (Fat, Female, Forty, Fertile), OCPs, fibrates, Crohn's, rapid weight loss.
- Look: Yellow-green, often large, radiolucent (mostly).
-
Pigment Stones (~20%):
- Black Stones:
- Patho: ↑Unconjugated bilirubin (hemolysis, cirrhosis).
- Composition: Calcium bilirubinate.
- Look: Small, dark, brittle. Radio-opaque (~50-75%).
- Brown Stones:
- Patho: Infection (E. coli, parasites), stasis.
- Composition: Ca-bilirubinate, cholesterol, Ca-palmitate/stearate.
- Look: Soft, earthy, in ducts. Radiolucent.
- Black Stones:
-
⭐ Most common: Cholesterol stones (cholesterol monohydrate).
Gallbladder Grief - Inflamed & Irritated
- Acute Cholecystitis: Sudden inflammation; 90% due to gallstone in cystic duct.
- Patho: Obstruction → inflammation → ischemia.
- Clinical: RUQ pain, positive Murphy's sign, fever, ↑WBC.
- Diagnosis: Ultrasound (wall thickness > 4mm, pericholecystic fluid, sonographic Murphy's). HIDA scan if USG equivocal.
- Complications: Gangrene, perforation, emphysematous cholecystitis (gas-forming organisms; common in diabetics).
- Chronic Cholecystitis: From repeated acute attacks or chronic gallstone irritation.
- Clinical: Recurrent RUQ pain, dyspepsia, fatty food intolerance.
- Histopathology: Thickened fibrotic wall, chronic inflammation. Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses (mucosal herniations into muscularis).
- Complications: Porcelain gallbladder (calcification, ↑cancer risk), Mirizzi syndrome.
- Acalculous Cholecystitis: Inflammation without stones. Seen in critically ill patients (TPN, trauma, burns). Patho: stasis, ischemia.
⭐ Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses (mucosal herniations into the muscular layer) are pathognomonic for chronic cholecystitis.

Duct Dilemmas - Stones Astray, Pipes Blocked
- Choledocholithiasis: Gallstones in Common Bile Duct (CBD).
- Symptoms: RUQ pain, jaundice, ↑ALP, ↑GGT. MRCP confirms.
- Complications: Acute pancreatitis, cholangitis.
- Acute Cholangitis: CBD obstruction + bacterial infection.
- 📌 Charcot's triad: Fever, jaundice, RUQ pain.
- 📌 Reynold's pentad: Charcot's + hypotension, altered mental status (severe).
- Organisms: E. coli, Klebsiella, Enterococcus.
- Tx: IV Abx, urgent biliary drainage (ERCP).
⭐ Most common cause of ascending cholangitis is choledocholithiasis with biliary obstruction.
- Mirizzi Syndrome: CHD compression by impacted cystic duct/GB neck stone.
- Type I: External compression.
- Type II-IV: Cholecystocholedochal fistula.
- Biliary Strictures: Bile duct narrowing.
- Causes: Post-surgical (iatrogenic), PSC, malignancy, chronic pancreatitis.
- Symptoms: Jaundice, pruritus, recurrent cholangitis.

Biliary Neoplasms & Oddities - Growth & Glitches
- Gallbladder Carcinoma (GBC):
- Adenocarcinoma; most common biliary cancer.
- Risks: Gallstones (porcelain gallbladder), chronic cholecystitis, S. typhi, choledochal cysts.
- Late symptoms, poor prognosis.
- Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA):
- Bile duct malignancy: intrahepatic, perihilar (Klatskin), distal.
- Risks: PSC, liver flukes (Clonorchis, Opisthorchis), choledochal cysts, Caroli's.
- Markers: ↑CA19-9, ↑CEA.
⭐ Klatskin tumor: hilar CCA at hepatic duct bifurcation.
- Biliary Atresia:
- Neonatal obstructive cholangiopathy; fibrosis of extrahepatic ducts.
- Jaundice, acholic stools by 2 months.
- Kasai procedure; transplant common.
- Choledochal Cysts:
- Congenital biliary dilations (Todani types).
- Risks: Pancreatitis, cholangitis, ↑CCA. Excision.
- Caroli's Disease:
- Congenital intrahepatic duct dilation; with ARPKD.
- Risks: Stones, cholangitis, ↑CCA.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Cholesterol gallstones (common, Four Fs); Pigment stones: hemolysis (black), infection (brown).
- Acute cholecystitis: cystic duct stone obstruction, positive Murphy's sign.
- Chronic cholecystitis: Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses; porcelain gallbladder (↑ cancer risk).
- Ascending cholangitis: Charcot's triad (fever, jaundice, RUQ pain); Reynolds' pentad adds shock, confusion.
- PSC: linked to ulcerative colitis, p-ANCA, "onion-skin" fibrosis; ↑ cholangiocarcinoma risk.
- Gallbladder carcinoma: adenocarcinoma; risks: gallstones, porcelain gallbladder. Klatskin tumor: hilar cholangiocarcinoma.
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