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Cureus ; 15(9): e45167, 2023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37842445

ABSTRACT

Gallbladder volvulus is an uncommon cause of acute cholecystitis that results from the rotation of the gallbladder about its mesentery along the axis of the cystic pedicle. We present the case of an 87-year-old woman with acute abdominal pain in the right upper quadrant that began two days prior with no additional symptoms. The physical examination showed a large abdominal eventration on the right side and tenderness. A CT scan showed a distended gallbladder outside its liver bed and with a twist on its cystic pedicle, suggesting a gallbladder volvulus. Abdominal ultrasonography complementary revealed the gallbladder outside its vesicular fossa with incipient changes of acute cholecystitis but without evidence of gallstones. With the diagnosis of acute abdomen secondary to gallbladder volvulus, an emergency cholecystectomy was performed. The exact etiology of the gallbladder volvulus is unknown, although anatomical variants that predispose to its appearance have been described. The clinical presentation is similar to acute cholecystitis, so preoperative diagnosis can be challenging for both surgeons and radiologists and is often misdiagnosed. This is one of the few cases diagnosed with preoperative imaging techniques. Once diagnosed, the appropriate treatment is emergency cholecystectomy. Early diagnosis and surgical treatment are important before it progresses to necrosis, perforation, biliary peritonitis, and hemodynamic instability. Gallbladder volvulus is an uncommon condition. A high index of suspicion is required because the preoperative diagnosis is unusual. Once the diagnosis is established, the treatment is fundamentally surgical.

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