Biliary Dyskinesia
A problem that occurs mostly in older children and adults is biliary
dyskinesia. This happens when the gallbladder does not squeeze properly
and the bile does not drain out of the gallbladder properly. It may be
that biliary dyskinesia has some connection to chronic cholecystitis
(see above). There is often a delay in diagnosis of patients with this
condition because ultrasound does not show gallstones. These patients
have a history of nausea and intermittent right upper abdominal pain
that usually occurs after meals.
The diagnosis of biliary dyskinesia may be difficult and may not be
exact. It may be diagnosed with cholescintigraphy (see above) combined
with the injection of a medicine called cholecystokinin. This hormone
causes the gallbladder to squeeze. Normally when the gallbladder
squeezes most of the bile is squeezed out into the intestine to help
digest food. Patients with biliary dyskinesia may only squeeze out about
35-40% or less of the total gallbladder contents. This is called an
ejection fraction. If a child appears to have symptoms of this condition
and the ejection fraction is less than 35-40%, gallbladder removal is
recommended, although the patient and family should understand that
there is no guarantee that symptoms will resolve. This is because the
diagnosis may not be exact and it may be difficult to tell whether the
cause of symptoms is from the gallbladder or is due to another problem
such as acid problems in the stomach.
Article and graphics adapted from O'Neill: Principles of Pediatric
Surgery. © 2003, Elsevier.
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