Cholecystostomy in the High Risk Patient with Biliary Tract Disease
- 1 February 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 185 (2) , 185-191
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-197702000-00009
Abstract
The morbidity of complications and mortality following surgical operations for nonmalignant disease of the biliary tract is greatest among those 65 years and older. The reported overall mortality regardless of age ranges upward from 0.88%.' At The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center for a 43-year period (1932–1975) it was 1.77%. For those 65 and older it was 5.1%. For patients with acute cholecystitis it was 3.5% and of those in this category 65 and older it was 9.2%. This experience and that reported from other comparable clinics is the basis for advocating that the procedure selected be within the capacity of the patient to tolerate it. Specifically a cholecystostomy, a compromise procedure, may be lifesaving for the presenting situation deferring choiecystectomy until later. Admittedly the more effectual approach is undelayed definitive surgery when calculous disease is demonstrated.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cholecystostomy for acute cholecystitis.1975
- Cholecystostomy for acute cholecystitisThe American Journal of Surgery, 1973
- Outcome of cholecystostomy.1972
- Acute Cholecystitis in a Municipal HospitalArchives of Surgery, 1969
- Acute cholecystitis following the surgical treatment of unrelated disease.1956
- ACUTE CHOLECYSTITIS FOLLOWING THE SURGICAL TREATMENT OF UNRELATED DISEASEAnnals of Surgery, 1947