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Vol. 19. Issue S1.
Abstracts of the 2020 Annual meeting of the Mexican Association of Hepatology (AMH) – XV Congreso Nacional de Hepatología (23-25 de julio)
Pages 3 (September 2020)
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Vol. 19. Issue S1.
Abstracts of the 2020 Annual meeting of the Mexican Association of Hepatology (AMH) – XV Congreso Nacional de Hepatología (23-25 de julio)
Pages 3 (September 2020)
6
Open Access
Gallbladder adenomyomatosis
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J. Aquino-Matus, M. Enriquez-Pineda, A. Pereira-Garcia, S. Ornelas-Arroyo
Medica Sur Clinical Foundation, Mexico
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Background and aim: Adenomatous hyperplasia of the gallbladder or adenomyomatosis is a benign neoplasia characterized by epithelium hyperplasia with invaginations into the subserose forming intramural diverticula (Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses). It is reported in 1 to 8.5% of cholecystectomies and 7% of autopsies. It has been associated with cholelithiasis in 80% of cases and may have an asymptomatic course or present with biliary cholic. According to its site it can be localized, annular, diffuse or segmental; the later associated with cancer in 3.2%.

Material and methods: Retrospective review of medical records of patients with pathology study diagnosis of adenomyomatosis from January 1st, 2015 through December 31st, 2019.

Results: Twenty-four cases were found, with 58.3% of women and mean age of 51 years. Elective cholecystectomy was found in 26% of cases. Most frequent symptoms were abdominal pain, nausea and, vomit with 75%, 41.7%, and 33.3%, respectively. Duration of symptoms was less than 24hours in 21.1%, and 7 days to 3 months in 57.9% of cases. Smoking was reported in 58.3%, alcohol consumption in 12.5% and dyslipidemia in 20.8% of cases. Murphy's sign was reported in 37.5% and the most frequent clinical diagnosis was acute cholecystitis in 66.7% of cases. Mean alkaline phosphatase was 105.6±76.0 UI/L and mean gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase was 113.2±161.3 UI/L. In abdominal ultrasound, the gallbladder had a thin wall in 50%, thick wall in 8.3%, polyps in 20.8% and stones in 54.2% of cases. In pathology studies, mean thickness of adenomyomatosis was 90.5mm and the location were localized (fundus) in 58.3%, diffuse in 20.8% and annular in 4.2% of cases.

Conclusions: Female sex (estrogens), chronic inflammation (cholecystitis) and cholelithiasis are the few associated factors for the development of adenomyomatosis. Most ultrasound findings are non-specific and, therefore, presurgical diagnosis is difficult. In most of the cases, the diagnosis of adenomyomatosis was an incidental finding associated with acute cholecystitis.

Conflicts of interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare. Funding was sponsored by the authors.

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