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Admission Conference May 24, 2011. Mark Anthony Melitante Leviste Ateneo School of Medicine and Public Health Batch 2013. General Data. JP 32 years old Male Roman Catholic Filipino. Chief Complaint. Gallstones on Ultrasound. History of Present Illness. 1 year PTC.
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Admission ConferenceMay 24, 2011 Mark Anthony Melitante Leviste Ateneo School of Medicine and Public Health Batch 2013
General Data • JP • 32 years old • Male • Roman Catholic • Filipino
Chief Complaint Gallstones on Ultrasound
History of Present Illness 1 year PTC Patient was found to have a 0.3 cm polyp in Gallbladder via routine pre-employment ultrasound No medications given and procedures done Patient did not feel any pain
History of Present Illness 1 year PTC Patient was advised to engage more in exercise and to change his diet.
History of Present Illness Polyps were seen on routine pre-employment physical examination. The polyps increased to 0.6 cm in size. This prompted patient to seek second opinion. 1 mo. PTC
History of Present Illness Repeat ultrasound revealed gallbladder stones, measuring about 0.6 cm each. Thus prompting admission for procedure. 1 mo. PTC
Review of Systems • Unremarkable • Pertinent negatives • General symptoms: fever, weight changes, headache, dizziness • Skin: Rashes, changes in skin color (jaundice) • GI symptoms: nausea, vomiting, changes in bowel movements • GU symptoms: changes in urine color
Past Medical History • Unremarkable • No history of other gastrointestinal diseases • No history of previous surgeries and hospitalization • No known allergies
Family and Personal-Social History • Asthma – siblings • No known first and second degree relatives having the same symptoms • College Graduate (BS MT) • Occupation: Seafarer • Smoker, 11.25 pack-year • Occasional drinker • No history of illicit drug use • Diet include rice with pork, fish and veggies
Physical Examination • Anthropometrics • Height: 175.5 cm • Weight: 91 kg. • BMI: 29.54 kg/m2 • Vital Signs • BP: 100/80 mmHg • HR: 90 beats/min., regular rate • RR: 24 breaths/min., regular rate • Temp: 36.2 degrees Celsius • Patient is coherent, alert, not in pain and respiratory distress
Physical Examination • Unremarkable • Pertinent Negatives • HEENT: anicteric sclera • CP: normal chest expansion, clear BS, normal rate and rhythm, no wheezes, rales; PMI located at 5th ICS,LML, regular rate and rhythm, good S1 and S2, no heaves, thrills or lifts
Physical Examination • Pertinent Negatives • Abdomen: protuberant, without visible pulsations and lesions, normoactive bowel sounds, no tenderness, organomegaly, negative Murphy’s sign, direct and rebound tenderness • Neurologic: Intact
Salient Features SUBJECTIVE OBJECTIVE Normal PE findings Overweight based on BMI • 32/M • Gallstones on ultrasound • Diet include more on protein-rich food • Seafarer
Assessment Cholelithiasis
Cholelithiasis • Gallbladder stones • Formed due to abnormality in bile salt constituents • Two types: • Cholesterol • Pigment • Most are asymptomatic • Most common cause • Increased biliary secretion of cholesterol
Cholelithiasis • Risk Factors: • High fat diet • Obesity • First degree relative who have cholelithiasis • Pregnancy • Prolonged parenteral nutrition • Race • Female sex hormones
Cholelithiasis • Signs and Symptoms • Most are asymptomatic • Right upper quadrant pain, with radiation to interscapular area or shoulder • Jaundice • Fever
Cholelithiasis • Differential Diagnoses • Gallbladder polyps • Peptic ulcer disease • Gastroesophageal Reflux (GER) • Irritable bowel syndrome • Hepatitis
Cholelithiasis • Imaging Modalities • Abdominal/RUQ Ultrasound • Endoscopic retrograde Cholangiopancreatography • Abdominal CT Scan • Laboratory Studies • Bilirubin levels • Liver function tests
Cholelithiasis • Treatment • Surgery: Cholecystectomy • Open • Laparoscopic • Gallstone Dissolution • Ursodeoxycholicacid
Cholelithiasis • Possible complications • Cholecystitis • Pancreatitis • Cholangitis • Chronic cholelithiasis
Plan Elective surgery via Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy
Thank you for your attention! Admission Conference May 24, 2011 St. Martin de Porres Charity Hospital