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Gallbladder injury in a catatrauma patient: a clinical case.

Aleksey Vasilyevich ShabuninDavid DolidzeNatalia PichuginaYuriy BarinovTatiana SheviakovaNataliya IvanovaYury MarchenkovSerghei Covantsev
Published in: Folia medica (2023)
Gallbladder trauma is a rare medical emergency in abdominal surgery because of its anatomic location. Gallbladder injury occurs in only 1.9%-2.1% of cases with abdominal traumas, with an isolated injury being ten times rarer. Despite the different mechanisms of injury, intravesical hypertension is the most important factor contributing to gallbladder rupture. A fall from a height is a rare cause of gallbladder injury, with only a few cases described in the literature. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the most common primary treatment. In the present case report, we present the diagnosis and management of a patient with a rare combined trauma. The patient was polytraumatized but had an isolated gallbladder injury in the absence of other abdominal injuries. Modern diagnostic methods, primarily ultrasound, can be critical in determining the best treatment strategy.
Keyphrases
  • case report
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • healthcare
  • emergency department
  • systematic review
  • blood pressure
  • public health
  • body mass index
  • replacement therapy
  • smoking cessation