Non-malignant Gall Bladder Perforation: Our Experience from an Institution-based Retrospective Analysis of 25 Cases
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Gallbladder perforation still continues to perplex surgeons; 25 such patients diagnosed either pre- or intra-operatively and managed at our institute over the last 10 years period were analysed. Only eight were diagnosed pre-operatively, while a large majority (17) had a wrong initial working diagnosis. Symptoms and signs were variable. No blood investigation was specific. A computed tomography scan was generally better than ultrasound in detecting the perforation. All our cases were managed operatively with no mortality and a mean duration of hospital stay of 6.8 days. Most perforations were extra-hepatic (84%) and those of Niemeier's type I (52.2%). Because of its varied clinical presentation, gallbladder perforation is often an intra-operative diagnosis, but early intervention carries a good outcome.
Minimally invasive approach in a rare emergency surgery, gallbladder perforation.
Aydogdu Y, Gulcek E, Koyuncuoglu A, Buyukkasap C, Dikmen K BMC Surg. 2024; 24(1):207.
PMID: 38987756 PMC: 11234621. DOI: 10.1186/s12893-024-02495-z.