Don't cry over spilled stones? Complications of gallstones spilled during laparoscopic cholecystectomy: case report and literature review.
The gallbladder is perforated and stones are spilled more frequently during laparoscopic cholecystectomy than during open cholecystectomy. Recent reports have implicated spilled gallstones as a source of infrequent but serious complications of laparoscopic of laparoscopic cholecystectomy. They can cause serious morbidity, and in most cases the patient will require open surgery for management of these complications. The authors report the case of a patient who was ill for 14 months after laparoscopic cholecystectomy when spilled stones formed a nidus for intra-abdominal abscess and colocutaneous fistula. Every effort must be made to prevent gallbladder perforation. When it does occur, all stones should be retrieved. Attempts at repairing gallbladder perforations are often unsatisfactory. A simple solution to this potential problem is to retrieve all stones immediately, place them in an intraperitoneal specimen bag, and "park" the bag on the liver. As soon as the gallbladder is dissected off the liver it should be placed in the specimen bag with the stones and removed through the umbilical port opening.