Several recent reports have indicated an increased prevalence of gallstones in association with pregnancy. If these reports are true, the early puerperium should be a favorable time to detect the disease in its initial stages and follow its natural course. Accordingly, the gallbladder was examined by ultrasound in 980 women during the immediate postpartum period and in 150 nulliparous, age-matched healthy volunteers. Gallstones were detected in 12.2% of the puerperal women and in 1.3% of the control group. In 70 patients who had stones in a functioning gallbladder, 22 (31%) had had attacks of biliary colic. The history of pain was more common in patients with stones greater than 10 mm in diameter. Forty-one women with small stones (< 10 mm) were followed clinically and ultrasonographically for between 6 and 24 (mean = 8.7) mo. All remained pain-free, and in twelve subjects (29%) the stones disappeared. Gallbladder bile was examined in 11 normal volunteers (controls) immediately after delivery and in 19 women with small stones 39 +/- 6 days postpartum. Bile was saturated with cholesterol in the controls and was unsaturated in patients with gallstones. We conclude that in our population pregnancy is a very important pathogenetic factor favoring gallstone formation. Attacks of biliary colic appear early and frequently in young Chilean women with this disease. Unexplained disappearance of small stones frequently occurs: in some cases it is likely to be the result of spontaneous dissolution because bile becomes unsaturated within a few weeks of delivery.
We report an autopsy study of gallbladder cancer prevalence in Chile, where the risk of this disease is among the highest reported world-wide. In 14,768 autopsy protocols obtained from 3 university hospitals, 45% of women and 20% of men older than 20 years had gallstone disease (the major known risk factor for gallbladder cancer). The prevalence of gallbladder cancer in Chileans was compared to that found in a Swedish-Czechoslovakian autopsy study previously published. These countries were chosen because of their high frequency of gallstone disease. The comparison was performed by using logistic regression models adjusting for possible differences in the age-sex structure or the true incidence of gallstones in both populations. We found that the most important single risk factor for gallbladder cancer in Chile was gallstone disease, with an estimated effect on the logistic scale meaning that the cancer risk for subjects with gallstones is seven times higher than for those without the disease. Second in importance was the risk for sex, women being 2.8 times higher than for men. The estimated difference in the sex composition and the incidence of gallstones resulted in 17.9% higher odds of cancer in Chile than in Sweden and Czechoslovakia. However, this difference was not significant. This study suggests that the major etiologic factors of gallbladder cancer in Chileans, Swedes and Czechoslovakians are primarily related to gallstone disease.
SUMMARY The early appearance of cholesterol gallstones is very common in Chile. To elucidate the mechanisms involved in this phenomenon, the size of the bile acid pool and the secretion of biliary lipids were studied in two groups ofyoung women with normal weights and radiologically functioning gallbladders: nine with cholesterol gallstones and 14 healthy volunteers. The bile acid pool was similar in control and gallstone patients. The secretory rates of bile acids and phospholipids were comparable and significantly correlated in both groups. On the other hand, cholesterol output was higher in gallstone patients. In controls there was a significant correlation between the output of bile acids and cholesterol, but no correlation was found in the gallstone group. This study suggests that cholesterol hypersecretion into the bile is a major factor in the pathogenesis of cholesterol gallstone disease in young Chilean women with normal weights.
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