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Focal Vs Diffuse Gall Bladder Wall Thickening

Focal vs diffuse gall bladder wall thickening

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Page 1: Focal vs diffuse gall bladder wall thickening

Focal Vs Diffuse Gall Bladder Wall Thickening

Page 2: Focal vs diffuse gall bladder wall thickening

Objectives

• Normal GB wall Appearance• Causes Of focal GB wall thickening• Causes of diffuse GB wall thickening• Appearances of different conditions• Differentiating points• Pitfalls of GB wall thickening

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Gall Bladder

• Normal wall thickness < 3mm• The normal gallbladder wall appears

as a pencil-thin echogenic line at sonography.

• The thickness of the gallbladder wall depends on the degree of gallbladder distention and pseudothickening can occur in the postprandial state.

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LEFT: US of a normal gallbladder after an overnight fast shows the wall as a pencil-thin echogenic line (arrow).RIGHT: US in the postprandial state shows pseudothickening of the gallbladder

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The normal gallbladder wall is usually perceptible at CT as a thin rim of soft-tissue density that enhances after contrast injection.

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Thickened gallbladder wall

• Thickening of the gallbladder wall is a relatively frequent finding at diagnostic imaging studies.

• A thickened gallbladder wall measures more than 3 mm, typically has a layered appearance at sonography , and at CT frequently contains a hypodense layer of subserosal oedema that mimics pericholecystic fluid.

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LEFT: US in a 59-year-old woman with acute cholecystitis shows the layered appearance of a thickened gallbladder wall, with a hypoechoic region between echogenic linesRIGHT: At contrast-enhanced CT the thick-walled gallbladder contains a hypodense outer layer (arrow) due to subserosal oedema

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Focal Wall Thickening

• Polyps• Adenomyomatosis• Carcinoma• Xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis• Metastasis• Chronic cholecystitis• Tumefactive sludge / Sludge balls

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Polyps/ Cholesterolosis

• A condition in which triglycerides, cholesterol esters and cholesterol precursors are deposited in lamina propria of GB.

• Cause is unknown• Not related to serum lipid level,

atherosclerosis, diabetes, cholesterol stones, or hyperconcentration of cholesterol in bile.

• Most cases do not produce any detectable change in appearance.

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• Sometimes referred to as “Strawberry gallbladder”

• Minority of cases are of polypoid variety• Cholesterol polyps are “enlarged

papillary fronds filled with lipid laden macrophages”

• Attached to the wall by a stalk• “Ball on the wall”• 5mm or less, rarely get bigger than

10mm

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• Do not acoustic shadowing• Do not exhibit postural movement• Other less common types of polyps

are adenoma papilloma leiomyoma lipoma neuroma

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• Polyps < 5mm – no further evaluation 5-10mm – monitoring > 10mm – should be removed• As the polyp enlarges – risk of

malignancy increases

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Large Fibrous Polyps of the Gallbladder Simulating Gallbladder Carcinoma

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GB Polyp fixed to the ventral wall of the GB

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Diffuse Wall Thickness

• CAUSES• Biliary Causes 1.Cholecystitis 2.Adenomyomatosis 3.Cancer 4.AIDS cholangiopathy 5.Sclerosing cholangitis

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• NON BILIARY CAUSES 1.Hepatitis 2.Pancreatitis 3.Heart Failure 4.Hypoproteinemia 5.Cirrhosis 6.Portal hypertension 7.Lymphatic obstruction

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Cholecystitis

• Acute• Chronic• Acalculous• Xanthogranulomatous

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Acute cholecystitis

• Fourth most common cause of hospital admissions for patients presenting with an acute abdomen

• It is the prime diagnostic concern when a thick-walled gallbladder is found at imaging.

• This feature, however, is not pathognomonic and additional imaging signs should be present to support the diagnosis of acute calculous cholecystitis.

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Signs of Acute cholecystitis

• Thickened gall bladder wall• Obstructing gallstone• Hydropical dilatation of the gallbladder,• A positive sonographic Murphy's sign

( i.e., pain elicited by pressure over the sonographically located gallbladder),

• Pericholecystic fat inflammation or fluid • Hyperemia of the gallbladder wall at

power Doppler

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Acute calculous cholecystitis. Transverse sonogram at the spot of maximum tenderness shows a non-compressible hydropically distended thick-walled gallbladder (arrowheads), with an intraluminal stone and sludge or debris. Contrast-enhanced CT depicts extensive fat inflammation (arrowheads) surrounding the gallbladder (arrow).

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Chronic cholecystitis

• Chronic cholecystitis is a term used clinically to refer to symptomatic gallbladder stones that cause transient obstruction, leading to a low-grade inflammation with fibrosis .

• Correlation of the imaging finding of a stone-containing slightly thick-walled gallbladder with the clinical history is critical.

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Chronic cholecystitis. Longitudinal sonogram of the gallbladder shows slight wall thickening (arrow) and an intraluminal non-obstructing stone

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Acalculous cholecystitis

• Mainly occurs in critically ill patients, (Major surgery, Major trauma,extensive

burns)• Due to Increased bile viscosity from fasting and Medication that causes cholestasis. • The imaging features are those of acute

cholecystitis, except for the absence of stones whereas gallbladder sludge is usually present.

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Acalculous cholecystitis

PITFALL• Because in critically ill patients

gallbladder abnormalities are frequently found secondary to systemic disease , acalculous cholecystitis can be difficult to diagnose .

• In these patients a percutaneous cholecystostomy can be both diagnostic and therapeutic.

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74-year-old man with acute acalculous cholecystitis.LEFT: US at the spot of maximum tenderness shows mural thickening of the gallbladder (arrow) that is completely filled with sludge (asterix) without any stones.RIGHT: Power-Doppler sonography shows hypervascularity of the gallbladder wall (arrowhead), as a supporting sign of inflammation.

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Xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis

• Unusual variant of chronic cholecystitis,

• Characterized by a Destructive inflammatory process with varying proportions of fibrous tissue, inflammatory cells and lipid laden macrophages

• Gall stones +/-• Locally invasive

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• Imaging studies show marked gallbladder wall thickening, often containing intramural nodules that are hypoechoic at sonography and hypoattenuating at CT, representing abscesses or foci of xanthogranulomatous inflammation.

• These features overlap with those of gallbladder carcinoma, making preoperative distinction between these entities often impossible.

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Xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis. LEFT: US shows marked wall thickening with intramural hypoechoic nodules (arrowheads), and an intraluminal stone (arrow).RIGHT: Contrast-enhanced CT shows a deformed and thickened gallbladder wall containing hypoattenuating nodules

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Contrast-enhanced CT shows a deformed and thickened gallbladder wall containing hypoattenuating nodules . These represent abscesses or foci of inflammation. The lumen contains several stones (arrow).

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Adenomyomatosis

• Benign condition that requires no specific treatment,

• Incidental finding in upto 9% of cholecystectomy specimens

Characterized by • 1. Epithelial proliferation, • 2. Muscular hypertrophia and • 3. Intramural diverticula (Rokitansky-

Aschoff sinuses), which may segmentally or diffusely involve the gallbladder.

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• The sonographic finding of cholesterol crystals, shown as 'comet-tail' reverberation artifacts, within a thickened wall of the gallbladder strongly suggests this diagnosis.

• Air may produce a similar artifact, however, patients with emphysematous cholecystitis are usually ill in contrast to those with adenomyomatosis.

• MR imaging may be able to differentiate adenomyomatosis from gallbladder carcinoma by depicting Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses.

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Four types of gallbladder adenomyomatosis

• A. Annular type. • B. Segmental type, which describes an

annular or segmental wall thickening causing stricture that divides the gallbladder lumen into separate interconnected compartments.

• C. Fundal type,(adenomyoma) a focal elevated lesion with a central dimple located at the fundus of the gallbladder.

• D .Diffuse type, a thickened wall involving the entire gallbladder.

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• Exclusion of gallbladder cancer may be most problematic in segmental and focal cases. Focal adenomyomatosis may appear as a discrete mass, known as an adenomyoma.

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Diffuse adenomyomatosis of gall bladder. These gall bladder ultrasound images show multiple echogenic foci within the GB wall with V-shaped comet-tail .

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Gallbladder Adenomyomatosis: Axial CT of the abdomen with oral and IV contrast shows focal thickening of the gallbladder wall (arrows)

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Oral cholecystogram and MRCP

• Historically oral cholecystograms were performed, however due to low sensitivity and a high rate of contrast allergies it has now largely been replaced by MRCP which does not rely on contrast opacification of the lumen of the gallbladder.

• MRCP would be also to detect :• mural thickening• focal sessile mass• pearl necklace sign (fluid filled intramural

diverticula)• hourglass configuration in annular types

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Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses shown on the after fatty meal film at cholecystography Stricture is also present.

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Fundal nodule of adenomyomatosis before and aftergallbladder contraction.

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MRI

• The pearl necklace sign alludes to the characteristically curvilinear arrangement of multiple rounded hyperintense intraluminal cavities visualized at T2-weighted MR imaging and MR cholangiopancreatography of adenomyomatosis.

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pearl necklace sign

• It represents the contrast / fluid filled intramural mucosal diverticula (Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses) which line up reminiscent of pearls on a necklace.

• highly specific (92%)• frequently not seen,• only present in ~ 70% of cases

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coronal T2

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Gallbladder carcinoma

• Fifth most common malignancy of the GIT• found incidentally in 1% to 3% of cholecystectomy

specimens. • It is often detected at a late stage of the disease,

due to lack of early or specific symptoms. • Gallbladder carcinoma has various imaging

appearances, ranging from a - polypoid intra-luminal lesion to -an infiltrating mass replacing the

gallbladder, -diffuse mural thickening.

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Associated findings

• -- invasion of adjacent structures, • --secondary bile duct dilatation, and • --liver or nodal metastases may help in differentiating a carcinoma from

acute or xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis .• In absence of these associated

findings, it may not be possible to differentiate a carcinoma from xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis.

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Pathology

• 90% are adenocarcinoma , • 5% are squamous carcinomas and• 5% is anaplastic carcinomas.• They appear as gallbladder wall

thickening and induration. • Most common sites are at the

fundus and neck of the gallbladder• Pocelain GB and sclerosing

cholangitis are predisposing factors

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SPREADS 80% are detected after direct invasion or portal node involvement.

• Local direct invasion into the hepatic bed,

• Lymphatic spread into the cystic nodes, hiatal nodes and then to the superior and posterior pancreaticoduodenal nodes and the periaortic nodes.

• Blood borne spreads via the portal vein to the liver

• 5 yr survival is < 20%

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Investigations

• Abdominal ultrasound scan : may shows gallbladder wall thickening or a mass filling the gallbladder , which would be suggestive of malignancy.

• CT or MRI scan : show a mass in the region of gallbladder.

• Arteriographic CT portogram ; Where contrast is injected into the superior mesenteric artery , allows accurate measurements of the extent of the disease and is resectability.

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Gall bladder carcinoma with portal vein and biliary tree infiltration

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Abnormal gallbladder with stones and sludge and a thickened irregular wall. Liver metastases and tumor thrombus in the left portal vein.

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Portal Venous phase--- GB Ca

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This sagittal sonogram image demonstrates heterogeneous thickening of the gallbladder wall (arrows), found to be primary papillary adenocarcinoma

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Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis

• Etiology –unknown• Inflammatory process affecting

intra and extra hepatic ducts• Presentation and course is highly

variable• May present in infancy or old age• C/C --- cholestasis• Predisposition ---to bile duct cancer

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• Multifocal stricture of bile duct• 86% will have both intra and extra

hepatic involvement

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Characteristic intrahepatic strictures of sclerosing cholangitis.

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Characteristic stricturing of sclerosing cholangitis involvingthe intra- and extrahepatic biliary system.

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AIDS cholangiopathy

• Obliterative cholangiopathy due to oppurtunistic infection of the bile duct by

-CMV -Pnemocystis carinii -Cryptosporidium• Presentation is similar to PSC• C/C abd. Pain and cholangitis• Tx .. Endoscopic sphincterotomy

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• NON BILIARY CAUSES 1.Hepatitis 2.Pancreatitis 3.Heart Failure 4.Hypoproteinemia 5.Cirrhosis 6.Portal hypertension 7.Lymphatic obstruction

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Edematous thickening of the gallbladder wall in a patient with cardiac failure and ascites.

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Edematous thickened gallbladder wall in a patient with cardiac failure

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Edematous thickened gallbladder wall in a patient with hepatitis

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Hepatitis with a thickened gallbladder wall

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Gallbladder wall thickening in a patient with a sepsis and hepatosplenomegaly

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The image above was taken in a patient with cirrhosis, chronic ascites, and no acute complaints of upper abdominal pain.

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How to differentiate b/w cholecystitis and non biliary

causes

??

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How to differentiate b/w cholecystitis and non biliary

causes

• Clinical correlation• Presence and absence of

sonographic Murphy’s sign• Associated signs e.g. Pulsatile portal venous flow in

heart failure Portal HTN & nodular liver in

Cirrhosis

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Conclusion

• GB wall thickness can be --Focal --Generalized• Both biliary and non-biliary causes

can result in increase in wall thickness

• Clinical correlation is important

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