The effect of high serum lipid level on benign gallbladder diseases
Citation
Uyan, M., Şen, B., Arpa, M. & Okcu, O. (2022). The effect of high serum lipid level on benign gallbladder diseases. Medicine Science, 11(2), 789-793. http://doi.org/10.5455/medscience.2021.12.418Abstract
There is a positive correlation between serum lipid levels and benign gallbladder diseases. We wanted to evaluate whether there is a relationship between the preoperative
lipid profiles results with the presence of cholesterolosis, cholesterol polyps and cholelithiasis in the pathological examination. Patients who presented with various
symptoms and underwent cholecystectomy surgery in a tertiary university hospital were retrospectively analyzed. Pathological examination records of 331 patients
who had undergone cholecystectomy between 2016 and 2020 were obtained retrospectively. The latest lipid profiles results before the cholecystectomy were recorded.
Patients were divided into groups according to their lipid profiles periods before cholecystectomy. The cholecystectomy reports of the patients were examined in terms
of cholesterolosis, cholesterol polyp, and cholelithiasis. There was no difference between lipid profiles and the pathological subtypes in the patients whose lipid profiles
were measured between 0-30 days and 0-90 days preoperatively. There was a significant difference in triglyceride levels between patients with cholesterol polyps and
those without polyps, whose lipid profiles were measured within 90-180 days before surgery (p=0.031). There were significant differences in total cholesterol, triglyceride,
LDL, and non-HDL levels between patients with and without cholesterolosis (p=0.017, p=0.037, p=0.048, p=0.019, respectively). There was a significant difference
in triglyceride levels between patients with cholesterol polyps and those without polyps, whose lipid profiles were was measured within 0-180 days before surgery
(p=0.023). There was a significant difference in total cholesterol, LDL, and non-HDL levels between patients with and without cholesterolosis (p=0.017, p=0.021, p=0.03,
respectively). There is a positive correlation between preoperative serum lipid