â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Acute Cholecystitis is an inflammatory condition of the gallbladder, most commonly triggered by a gallstone obstructing the cystic duct (calculous cholecystitis).
â– THE CASCADING METABOLISMS:
1. Cystic Duct Blockage: A stone blocks the cystic duct.
2. Mucosal Distension: Secreted mucus cannot drain, causing gallbladder distension and severe wall tension.
3. Mucosal Ischemia: Mural tension compresses mucosal capillaries, causing ischemia.
4. Bacterial Translocation: Ischemia compromises the mucosal barrier, promoting bacterial translocation (commonly E. coli, Klebsiella) that worsens inflammation.
5. Peritoneal Irritation: The inflamed gallbladder rubs against the adjacent parietal peritoneum of the anterior abdominal wall.
â– PHARMACOKINETIC & PHARMACODYNAMIC ATTRIBUTES:
Absorption and steady-state kinetics display high variability based on plasma protein binding levels, tissue volume of distribution (Vd), and hepatic CYP450 microsomal enzymatic clearance indices.
â– EVIDENCE-BASED GUIDELINE SYNOPSIS:
Recent international multi-center guidelines emphasize starting therapeutic interventions immediately upon diagnosis to minimize long-term target organ strain.
[HY-BOARD-1052]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
Murphy's sign is elicited by palpating the right upper quadrant under the costal margin. As the patient takes a deep breath, the diaphragm descends, pushing the inflamed gallbladder against the examiner's fingers. This causes localized pain, prompting the patient to abruptly halt inspiration (inspiratory arrest). Closely monitor serum plasma concentrations if drugs display a narrow therapeutic window to mitigate toxic peaks. Consult updated medical consensus reports to align treatment protocols with modern precision standards.