The viscosity of gallbladder bile is markedly higher than that of hepatic bile in patients with gallstones. The concentration of mucin is the major determinant of biliary viscosity and may contribute by this mechanism to the role of mucin in the pathogenesis of gallstones.
Our results support a promoting effect of gallbladder mucin hypersecretion by lipid peroxidation leading to rapid formation of cholesterol crystals in gallbladder bile. These findings suggest that besides hypersecretion of cholesterol in bile, chronic inflammation of the gallbladder wall is implicated in the pathogenesis of cholesterol gallstone disease.
UDCA treatment reduces total and vesicular cholesterol, the formation of cholesterol crystals, viscosity, and the total amount of sedimentable fractions in gallbladder bile. These observations might explain, at least partially, why UDCA treatment attenuates the occurrence of biliary pain and complications in gallstone patients.
In comparison to the non apo E4 patients the apo E4 group showed a trend to elevated biliary cholesterol whereas crystal observation time, cholesterol saturation index, crystal mass, number of gallstones, cholesterol content of gallstones and total protein and mucin were not different. These findings do not suggest an association of the apo E isoform and the formation of cholesterol gallstones
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