Presentation
Right upper quadrant pain.
Patient Data
Mildly dilated gallbladder, mildly thickened wall, gallstones, and relatively subtle pericholcystic inflammation/stranding.
Polycystic kidneys with numerous calyceal stones.
Postoperative changes of cholecystectomy with small amount of organising fluid, clips, and a few stones in the cholecystectomy bed.
Small organising collection along the anterior aspect of the pylorus.
Additional collections of spilt gallstones layer along the anterior/inferior right hepatic lobe.
Collections along the inferior right hepatic lobe, abdominal wall musculature, and subcutaneous fat which contain fluid and several punctate gallstones.
Case Discussion
Gangrenous cholecystitis complicated by spilt gallstones, postoperative abscess formation and drainage, and more delayed presentation of right flank mass containing fluid/stones eroding through the right lateral abdominal wall.
This case highlights the inflammatory nature of dropped gallstones and how they can result in delayed complications, and the importance of reviewing previous imaging in order to piece the story together.
Dropped gallstones result from perforation of the gallbladder during cholecystectomy. While often they do not cause any patient harm, they can result in abscess or fistula formation after weeks, months, or even years 1.
This patient was managed with incision and drainage, with a note of several small foreign bodies resembling fragmented gallstones.