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1  by perforated ulcer, bowel obstruction, and cholecystitis.
2 east cancer with 5 or more years of use, and cholecystitis.
3 llbladder similar to that seen in acalculous cholecystitis.
4 biliary colic, acute pancreatitis, and acute cholecystitis.
5 edium from the gallbladder of a patient with cholecystitis.
6 bstantially the rate of progression to acute cholecystitis.
7 rked pericholecystic rim signs, 21 had acute cholecystitis.
8  laparotomy which revealed extensive chronic cholecystitis.
9 attern considered highly predictive of acute cholecystitis.
10  all events, uncomplicated events, and acute cholecystitis.
11 wing cholecystectomy showed signs of chronic cholecystitis.
12  laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) for acute cholecystitis.
13  LC within 10 days of presentation for acute cholecystitis.
14 ayed cholecystectomy for patients with acute cholecystitis.
15 a can very rarely be a complication of acute cholecystitis.
16  dyskinesia, acute cholecystitis, or chronic cholecystitis.
17 sal lining is evident in xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis.
18 all imaging modalities in detection of acute cholecystitis.
19  patients who were suspected of having acute cholecystitis.
20 n gallstones more than 5 years old and acute cholecystitis.
21  histopathologically proved acute or chronic cholecystitis.
22 sis and differentiation of acute and chronic cholecystitis.
23 ficantly different between acute and chronic cholecystitis.
24 utaneous cholecystostomy for acute calculous cholecystitis.
25 from a control group found not to have acute cholecystitis.
26 s, .9% and .8%; perforation, 0% and .8%; and cholecystitis, 0% and .8%.
27 o presented with signs and symptoms of acute cholecystitis 1 year after single lung transplant.
28 creatitis (4), peptic ulcer disease (4), and cholecystitis (2).
29  was biliary colic/dyskinesia (65.3%), acute cholecystitis (26.6%), choledocholithiasis (5.7%), or ga
30 athic hemorrhages, 1 renal infarction, and 1 cholecystitis; 4.0%; 95% CI, 1.1%-9.9%) at mean follow-u
31      The most common indications were severe cholecystitis (72.1%), followed by cholelithiasis in liv
32 SILCs were performed in the absence of acute cholecystitis (90.6%).
33                      Since only 31 had acute cholecystitis, a diagnosis based solely on that scintigr
34                    The pathogenesis of acute cholecystitis (AC) is controversial.
35 ated with a nonsuppurative and proliferative cholecystitis and choledochitis.
36                                              Cholecystitis and cholelithiasis are being recognized wi
37 creasing the need for inpatient observation, cholecystitis and complications of gall stones such as p
38 esting a potential contribution of embryonic cholecystitis and fetal gallbladder contraction in the e
39 iversity medical center with acute calculous cholecystitis and for whom a preoperative contrast mater
40 s emergently admitted to hospital with acute cholecystitis and managed with cholecystectomy over the
41       PTLD can occur in the setting of acute cholecystitis and may be missed if careful pathological
42                          Patients with acute cholecystitis and more than 72 hours of symptoms were ra
43 nd, or clinical course consistent with acute cholecystitis and no evidence for an alternate diagnosis
44 d with twice the expected incidence of acute cholecystitis and pancreatitis in the elderly (> or = 65
45                                        Acute cholecystitis and sternal wound infection caused an inor
46  Two patients (one diabetic) developed acute cholecystitis and underwent uncomplicated laparoscopic c
47 were thought to have other common causes for cholecystitis and ureteral obstruction.
48  with unusual manifestations of CMV disease (cholecystitis and ureteritis).
49 al centers for grade I or II acute calculous cholecystitis and who received 2 g of amoxicillin plus c
50 group is more likely to present with chronic cholecystitis and will require cholecystectomy at some p
51 ciated with the presence of gangrenous acute cholecystitis) and the presence of a gallstone in the ga
52 hich 493,569 were appendicitis, 395,838 were cholecystitis, and 412,163 were diverticulitis.
53  with diagnosis of acute appendicitis, acute cholecystitis, and diverticulitis.
54  spp and cholesterol cholelithiasis, chronic cholecystitis, and gallbladder cancer.
55 s were evaluated for gallstones, CBD stones, cholecystitis, and pancreatitis
56 y pathology, including cholelithiasis, acute cholecystitis, and pancreatitis.
57 ve heart failure, angina, falls, depression, cholecystitis, and total emergencies, as well as a contr
58                    Though cholelithiasis and cholecystitis are common clinical problems, spontaneous
59   Ninety percent of cases of acute calculous cholecystitis are of mild (grade I) or moderate (grade I
60  result of biliary stent occlusion and acute cholecystitis as a result of peritoneal metastasis (DL2)
61  a procedure for acute appendicitis or acute cholecystitis at inpatient hospitals between January 1,
62 nbiliary abdominal pain), chronic acalculous cholecystitis (CAC) (n = 27; biliary abdominal pain), ch
63 0 control subjects and 10 chronic acalculous cholecystitis (CAC) patients received 111-185 MBq 99mTc-
64 alue for the diagnosis of chronic acalculous cholecystitis (CAC).
65 cintigraphic diagnosis of chronic acalculous cholecystitis (CAC).
66 table blood glucose control, acute calculous cholecystitis, catheter sepsis, and severe venous thromb
67                         A rare case of acute cholecystitis caused by serogroup O1 Vibrio cholerae in
68 ; biliary abdominal pain), chronic calculous cholecystitis (CCC) (n = 6; biliary abdominal pain), and
69 alization due to symptomatic cholelithiasis, cholecystitis, choledocholithiasis, cholangitis, or bili
70 arious clinical indications, including acute cholecystitis, chronic acalculous gallbladder disease, h
71 cholecystitis, ruling in or ruling out acute cholecystitis consumes substantial diagnostic resources.
72 for conversion specifically related to acute cholecystitis, CT studies were analyzed according to pre
73               The incidence of uncomplicated cholecystitis decreased with increasing severity grade,
74 lecystectomy, 2 of the 5 patients with acute cholecystitis died.
75 nd thus could exclude both acute and chronic cholecystitis during a single hepatobiliary study.
76                             The ACDC ("Acute Cholecystitis-early laparoscopic surgery versus antibiot
77                                ELC for acute cholecystitis even beyond 72 hours of symptoms is safe a
78 appendicitis (F = 119.62, P < 0.0001), acute cholecystitis (F = 37.13, P < 0.0001), and diverticuliti
79 in MR findings between the acute and chronic cholecystitis groups.
80 red fifty-five patients with suspected acute cholecystitis had scintigraphy performed with 185-481 MB
81 gest that the diagnostic impression of acute cholecystitis has a positive LR of 25 to 30.
82 ive antibiotic management of acute calculous cholecystitis has been standardized, few data exist on t
83 g early to delayed cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis have limited contemporary external validit
84                             Of 31 with acute cholecystitis, however, 10 (32%) had a mild pericholecys
85  confidence interval [CI], 1.45-3.69), acute cholecystitis (HR, 9.49; 95% CI, 2.05-43.92), and uncomp
86 patients (94%) and correctly predicted acute cholecystitis in 6 of 8 patients.
87 going laparoscopic cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis in a primary care hospital within a five-y
88                                        Acute cholecystitis in an immunocompromised host is potentiall
89 ement serves as a treatment option for acute cholecystitis in elderly and critically ill patients.
90 r Helicobacter infection was associated with cholecystitis in humans.
91 d positive correlations with the severity of cholecystitis in individual Sox17(+/-) embryos.
92 about evaluation of predominantly acalculous cholecystitis in intensive care unit patients were exclu
93 my should become therapy of choice for acute cholecystitis in operable patients.
94 edicting parameter for the severity of acute cholecystitis in patients undergoing laparoscopic cholec
95 cintigraphy optimizes the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis in patients with the suggestive, but not p
96 adder visualization correctly excluded acute cholecystitis in seven; a single false-negative was enco
97 iptomic analyses revealed the early onset of cholecystitis in Sox17(+/-) embryos, together with the a
98 or the diagnosis and classification of acute cholecystitis in three severity grades.
99 r, as well as histological evidence of acute cholecystitis, in a patient who presented with signs and
100                         His risk factors for cholecystitis included advanced age and previous abdomin
101                    Acceptable definitions of cholecystitis included surgery, pathologic examination,
102 ty grade, while the incidence of complicated cholecystitis increased with increasing severity.
103                                        Acute cholecystitis is a common disease, and laparoscopic surg
104                             Acute acalculous cholecystitis is frequently seen in critically ill, sept
105               The pathogenesis of acalculous cholecystitis is unknown; however, previous studies have
106           The majority of patients had acute cholecystitis (n = 1218; 72.2%) and were admitted urgent
107 ent biliary pancreatitis (n = 43, 8%), acute cholecystitis (n = 17), and biliary colics (n = 35).
108 ed procedure-related pleural effusion (n=2), cholecystitis (n=1), and additional immunosuppression-re
109 were cholangitis (n=4), liver abscess (n=2), cholecystitis (n=2), phototoxic skin (n=5), and injectio
110 current HRT users had an age-adjusted RR for cholecystitis of 1.8 (95% CI, 1.6-2.0), increasing to 2.
111 e patients with complications), 19 for acute cholecystitis (one death, nine patients with complicatio
112 who underwent cholecystectomy had acalculous cholecystitis; one was incidental.
113 rt that CMV infection may present with acute cholecystitis or ureteral obstruction without its classi
114 r biliary colic or biliary dyskinesia, acute cholecystitis, or chronic cholecystitis.
115       Biliary drainage can cause cholangitis/cholecystitis, pancreatitis, hemorrhage, portal vein thr
116                    Among patients with acute cholecystitis, percutaneous cholecystostomy tubes were p
117 ation gastritis and gastrointestinal ulcers, cholecystitis, radiation pneumonitis, and radioembolizat
118 ctively; P = .04) were associated with acute cholecystitis-related conversion in a multivariate analy
119          Optimal timing of surgery for acute cholecystitis remains controversial: either early surger
120  the intensivist for diagnosis of acalculous cholecystitis, renal failure, and interstitial and paren
121 with acute abdominal pain will prove to have cholecystitis, ruling in or ruling out acute cholecystit
122 ciated with the presence of gangrenous acute cholecystitis (sensitivity, 73%).
123 le admitted with history suggestive of acute cholecystitis subsequently developed waxing waning jaund
124                Four reviewers blinded to the cholecystitis type but aware that cholecystitis was pres
125 bladder tissue from 46 Chileans with chronic cholecystitis undergoing cholecystectomy were cultured f
126 nfection, repeated choledocholisthiasis, and cholecystitis was admitted due to a heterogeneous cystic
127                         However, complicated cholecystitis was evident in an unexpectedly high number
128  in 7 placebo patients; progression to acute cholecystitis was observed in 4 and 11 patients, respect
129 ded to the cholecystitis type but aware that cholecystitis was present retrospectively evaluated MR i
130 ivity and specificity for detection of acute cholecystitis were 95% (18 of 19 patients) and 69% (nine
131                        Studies of acalculous cholecystitis were included.
132 ve 131I whole-body scans (sebaceous cyst and cholecystitis), which highlights two mechanisms (elimina
133 ong patients with mild or moderate calculous cholecystitis who received preoperative and intraoperati
134 f patients with abdominal pain suggestive of cholecystitis will continue to rely heavily on the clini
135 d laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) in acute cholecystitis with more than 72 hours of symptoms.
136                 LC is the treatment of acute cholecystitis, with consensus recommendation that patien
137 or differentiation between acute and chronic cholecystitis, with histopathologic analysis as the refe
138 es sufficient weight to establish or exclude cholecystitis without further testing (eg, right upper q
139 dy CT and MR findings in xanthogranulomatous cholecystitis (XGC).
140 ormed within 2 days of presentation of acute cholecystitis yielded the best outcomes and lowest costs

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