Causes
Usually, the disease is provoked by errors in the diet - the intake of fatty and spicy foods, which leads to intense bile formation, spasm of the sphincters in the biliary tract and biliary hypertension.
• Contributing factors are diseases of the stomach , and in particular gastritis with low acidity. They lead to a weakening of the protective mechanisms and the penetration of microflora into the biliary tract.
• With thrombosis of the cystic artery against the background of the pathology of the blood coagulation system and atherosclerosis, the development of a primary gangrenous form of acute cholecystitis is possible.
• Provoking factors in the presence of cholelithiasis can also be physical activity, "shaking" ride, which leads to displacement of the stone, blockage of the cystic duct and subsequent activation of the microflora in the lumen of the bladder.
• Infection of bile with bacterial flora, the development of infection (bacterial cholecystitis);
• Reflux of pancreatic enzymes into the gallbladder (enzymatic cholecystitis).
Pathogenesis:
Previously, it was believed that the main factor leading to the development of acute cholecystitis is bacterial. In accordance with this, treatment was prescribed aimed at eliminating the inflammatory process. At present, ideas about the pathogenesis of the disease have changed and, accordingly, treatment tactics have changed.
The development of acute cholecystitis is associated with a block of the gallbladder, which triggers all subsequent pathological reactions. The block is most often formed as a result of a stone wedging into the cystic duct. This is aggravated by reflex spasm of the sphincters in the bile ducts, as well as increasing edema
As a result of biliary hypertension, the microflora in the biliary tract is activated, and acute inflammation develops. Moreover, the severity of biliary hypertension directly depends on the degree of destructive changes in the wall of the gallbladder.
An increase in pressure in the biliary tract is a trigger for the development of many acute diseases of the hepatoduodenal zone (cholecystitis, cholangitis, pancreatitis). Activation of the intravesical microflora leads to even greater edema and impaired microcirculation, which, in turn, significantly increases the pressure in the biliary tract - a vicious circle closes.