Examples of gallstones in the following topics:
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Gallstones
- The composition of gallstones is affected by age, diet and ethnicity.
- Mixed gallstones typically contain 20%–80% cholesterol.
- Gallstones may be asymptomatic for years.
- Gallstones may recur once the drug is stopped.
- This gallbladder has been opened to show numerous gallstones.
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Pancreatitis
- Eighty percent of pancreatitis cases are caused by alcohol and gallstones.
- Gallstones are the single most common cause of acute pancreatitis, while alcohol is the single most common cause of chronic pancreatitis.
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Cholesterol Metabolism
- Under certain circumstances, when more concentrated, as in the gallbladder, cholesterol crystallizes and is the major constituent of most gallstones.
- Lecithin and bilirubin gallstones also occur, but less frequently.
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Anatomy of the Gallbladder
- At the neck of the gallbladder is a mucosal fold where gallstones commonly get stuck.
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Absorption of Alcohol
- Research has found that drinking reduces the risk of developing gallstones.
- Compared with alcohol abstainers, the relative risk of gallstone disease, controlling for age, sex, education, smoking and body mass index, is 0.83 for occasional and regular moderate drinkers (< 25 ml of ethanol per day), 0.67 for intermediate drinkers (25-50 ml per day), and 0.58 for heavy drinkers.
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Jaundice
- It may also indicate leptospirosis or obstruction of the biliary tract by gallstones or pancreatic cancer; it may less commonly be congenital in origin.
- The most common causes are gallstones in the common bile duct and pancreatic cancer in the head of the pancreas.
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Skin Color as a Diagnostic Clue
- It may also indicate leptospirosis or obstruction of the biliary tract, for example by gallstones or pancreatic cancer.