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. 1985 Apr;149(4):551-7.
doi: 10.1016/s0002-9610(85)80055-6.

Gallbladder disease in the morbidly obese

Gallbladder disease in the morbidly obese

J F Amaral et al. Am J Surg. 1985 Apr.

Abstract

During a 7 year period, 200 consecutive morbidly obese patients underwent a standardized gastric exclusion procedure. Group A was composed of the first 120 patients and Group B of the last 80 patients. In Group A, 22 patients had undergone a previous cholecystectomy and 12 patients had a cholecystectomy at the time of gastric exclusion because of positive diagnostic studies or palpation of stones. Of the remaining 87 patients in this initial group who were at risk for the development of gallbladder disease, 24 (27.6 percent) required a cholecystectomy in the first 3 postoperative years (mean 15.6 months). Twelve patients had acute cholecystitis, 3 patients had choledocholithiasis, and 1 patient had acute gallstone pancreatitis. In Group B, 18 patients had a previous cholecystectomy, 15 had positive diagnostic studies (ultrasonography and oral cholecystography) preoperatively, and 47 had negative studies. Cholecystectomy was routinely performed at the time of gastric exclusion surgery in the 62 patients with gallbladders in Group B. Of the 47 patients who had normal preoperative diagnostic studies, 40 (85.1 percent) had abnormal histologic findings in the gallbladder. Only seven patients in Group B had a normal gallbladder (14.7 percent). We conclude that gallbladder disease is considerably more frequent in the morbidly obese population (91.3 percent) than has previously been recognized, that diagnostic studies are frequently inaccurate, and that postoperative gallbladder disease is common (28.7 percent). On the basis of these results, routine cholecystectomy at the time of gastric exclusion surgery is recommended.

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