Uncomplicated Gallstone Diseases
NICE Clinical guideline [CG188] Gallstone disease: diagnosis and management. Last reviewed: Aug 2018.
This article covers the following 2 forms of uncomplicated gallstone diseases:
- Cholelithiasis: presence of gallstone(s) in the gallbladder
- Choledocholithiasis: presence of gallstone(s) in the common bile duct
Gallstone Disease Overview
Spectrum of Gallstone Disease Presentation
Be aware that gallstone disease can present as ANY of the following:
| Condition | Pathophysiology | Clinical and biochemical manifestations | Key investigations | Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cholelithiasis | Presence of gallbladder stone/s |
|
|
Elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy if symptomatic |
| Choledocholithiasis | Presence of common bile duct stone |
|
|
Bile duct clearance + laparoscopic cholecystectomy |
| Acute cholecystitis | Persistent cystic duct obstruction → gallbladder inflammation |
|
|
IV fluids + antibiotics → early laparoscopic cholecystectomy |
| Acute cholangitis | Common bile duct obstruction → ascending bacterial infection | Charcot’s triad:
|
|
IV antibiotics + urgent ERCP |
| Gallstone pancreatitis | Stone impacts at ampulla of Vater → pancreatic duct obstruction → pancreatitis |
|
|
Supportive (IV fluids, analgesia, optimise nutrition) → cholecystectomy after recovery |
Background Information (Gallstones)
Types of Gallstones
Gallstones are precipitated bile components. There are 3 main types, depending on their composition:
- Cholesterol stones (crystal precipitation) (~80%)
- Mostly radiolucent
- Pigmented stones (contain calcium bilirubinate, due to excess unconjugated bilirubin) (~10%)
- Radiopaque
- Mixed stones (~10%)
Risk Factors
Risk factors for gallstone formation can be divided according to the composition of the gallstone [Ref]
| Cholesterol gallstone (most common) | 5 Fs
Other risk factors
|
| Pigmented gallstone | Causes of chronic haemolysis
Other causes
|
Cholelithiasis (Gallbladder Stones)
Clinical Features
Clinical presentation spectrum: [Ref]
- Asymptomatic – most common (~80% cases are discovered incidentally on imaging)
- If symptomatic → biliary colic
Biliary colic presents as episodic postprandial abdominal pain (NB biliary colic is NOT exclusively postprandial, it can also occur at night): [Ref]
- Constant dull RUQ / epigastric pain (contrary to its name, the pain is usually constant instead of colicky)
- May radiate to the right shoulder / scapula
- Typically worse after fatty meals
- The pain characteristically resolves spontaneously within 5 hours (if persisting >5 hours, complications such as acute cholecystitis OR choledocholithiasis are more likely)
Biliary colic does NOT cause jaundice and fever.
Biliary colic results from transient obstruction of the cystic duct / gallbladder neck [Ref]
- When the gallbladder contracts to expel bile → the obstruction leads to increased intraluminal pressure and distension of the gallbladder wall
- The distension activates visceral sensory nerves, resulting in the characteristic pain of biliary colic
The pain resolves when the stone dislodges or passes into the duodenum
Investigation and Diagnosis
1st line and gold standard: ultrasound
- Direct visualisation of the stone: echogenic (bright) foci within the gallbladder lumen that produce posterior acoustic shadowing
- Normal gallbladder thickness confirms uncomplicated cholelithiasis
Laboratory test findings:
- Normal WCC, CRP and bilirubin level (as there is NO inflammation and NO cholestasis)
- LFTs are typically normal, or a transient mild elevation in AST and ALT
The classic table of biliary colic vs acute cholecystitis vs ascending cholangitis:
| Condition | Pain (RUQ / epigastric) | Signs of inflammation (fever / ↑ WCC / ↑ CRP) | Signs of biliary obstruction (jaundice / hyperbilirubinaemia) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cholelithiasis (biliary colic) | Yes | No | No |
| Choledocholithiasis | Yes | No | Yes |
| Acute cholecystitis | Yes | Yes | No |
| Ascending cholangitis | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Management
General / Conservative Management
Offer:
- Analgesia (typically NSAIDs for biliary colic)
- Healthy lifestyle, regular physical activity
- Maintain a healthy body weight
- Dietary modification (low-fat diet)
Definitive Management
Offer elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy to those with symptomatic cholelithiasis (currently symptomatic / experienced symptoms in the past 12 months before diagnosis)
Note that treatment (laparoscopic cholecystectomy) is NOT indicated in patients with asymptomatic gallbladder stones with a normal biliary tree.
Litholysis using bile acids (e.g. ursodeoxycholic acid) +/- extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy is NOT recommended.
Choledocholithiasis (Common Bile Duct Stone)
Clinical Features
Choledocholithiasis typically presents with: [Ref1][Ref2]
- Signs of obstructive cholestasis
- Jaundice
- Pale stools and dark urine
- RUQ / upper abdominal pain
- Pain lasting >5 hours (unlike in biliary colic from cholelithiasis, which resolves after 1-5 hours)
- May radiate to the back
- +/- Nausea, vomiting, anorexia
Investigation and Diagnosis
1st line test:
- Ultrasound
- Dilated common bile duct (>6mm) + direct visualisation of the stone (echogenic [bright] foci within the common bile duct lumen that produce posterior acoustic shadowing)
- NB that a dilated common bile duct alone is NOT diagnostic, further testing is necessary, see below
- LFTs
- Cholestatic pattern (↑↑ ALP and bilirubin) is classic
- AST and ALT are typically normal or mildly elevated
Further tests:
- If ultrasound fails to detect stones but the bile duct is dilated and/or abnormal LFTs → consider MRCP
- If MRCP failed to establish a diagnosis → consider endoscopic ultrasound
The classic table of biliary colic vs acute cholecystitis vs ascending cholangitis:
| Condition | Pain (RUQ / epigastric) | Signs of inflammation (fever / ↑ WCC / ↑ CRP) | Signs of biliary obstruction (jaundice / hyperbilirubinaemia) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cholelithiasis (biliary colic) | Yes | No | No |
| Choledocholithiasis | Yes | No | Yes |
| Acute cholecystitis | Yes | Yes | No |
| Ascending cholangitis | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Management
All patients (both symptomatic and asymptomatic) should be offered intervention:
- Bile duct clearance (surgically or ERCP), and
- Laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Biliary stenting is only a temporary measure if ERCP fails to clear the bile duct, until definitive endoscopic or surgical clearance can be achieved.