Acute Cholangitis
1. Definition
Acute cholangitis is a life-threatening ascending infection of the biliary tree occurring due to biliary obstruction + bacterial infection.
Classic triad = Charcot’s triad
- Fever
- Jaundice
- Right upper quadrant pain
Severe disease = Reynolds pentad
- Charcot triad
- Hypotension
- Altered mental status
Charcot triad present in ~50–70% only → absence does NOT exclude cholangitis.
2. Pathophysiology
Mechanism
- Obstruction of bile duct
- Stone (most common)
- Tumour
- Stricture
- Stent blockage
- → ↑ Intraductal pressure (>20 cm H₂O)
- → Breakdown of tight junctions
- → Bacteriobilia → Bacteraemia
- → Sepsis / Septic shock
3. Causes of Biliary Obstruction
|
Cause |
Examples |
|
Gallstones (most common cause) |
CBD stone |
|
Malignancy |
Cholangiocarcinoma, Pancreatic cancer |
|
Benign stricture |
Post-operative, PSC |
|
Iatrogenic |
ERCP |
|
Parasites |
Ascaris |
4. Microbiology
Most common organisms
- E. coli (most common)
- Klebsiella
- Enterococcus
- Enterobacter
- Anaerobes (less common)
Infection is usually polymicrobial.
5. Clinical Features
Early disease
- Fever with rigors(Infection)
- RUQ pain(Obstruction)
- Jaundice(Cholestasis)
- Nausea/vomiting
Severe disease
- Hypotension(Sepsis)
- Confusion(Organ dysfunction)
- Oliguria
- Septic shock
6. Tokyo Guidelines
Diagnosis requires:Diagnosis = A + B + C
A. Systemic inflammation
- Fever >38°C
- Raised WBC / CRP
B. Cholestasis
- Jaundice
- ↑ ALP / GGT / bilirubin
C. Imaging
- Dilated bile duct
- Cause of obstruction
7. Severity Grading (Tokyo Guidelines)
- Grade I (Mild)
- Grade II (Moderate)
Any 2:
- WBC >12,000 or <4,000
- Fever >39°C
- Age >75
- Hyperbilirubinaemia
- Low albumin
→ Early drainage (within 24–48 hrs)
Grade III (Severe)
Organ dysfunction:
- Hypotension requiring vasopressors
- Altered mental state
- PaO₂/FiO₂ <300
- Creatinine >176 μmol/L
- INR >1.5
- Platelets <100
→ Requires urgent biliary drainage within 24 hours
8. Investigations
Bloods
- FBC → neutrophilia
- CRP ↑
- Bilirubin ↑
- ALP ↑
- GGT ↑
- ALT mild ↑
- Blood cultures (before antibiotics)
Imaging
Ultrasound (First-line)
Findings:
- Dilated CBD (>6 mm)
- Stone
- Gallbladder pathology
MRCP (Best non-invasive test)
- Defines level of obstruction
- No therapeutic role
ERCP (Gold standard – Diagnostic + Therapeutic)
- Stone extraction
- Stenting
- Drainage
9. Management
1. INITIAL APPROACH (FIRST 1–3 HOURS: “SEPSIS MINDSET”)
Acute cholangitis is a life-threatening biliary sepsis → treat like septic shock with source control urgency
Immediate priorities
- Airway, Breathing, Circulation (ABC)
- Early recognition of sepsis / septic shock
- Initiate Sepsis bundle within 1 hour
Hemodynamic Resuscitation
- IV crystalloids (balanced preferred)
- 30 mL/kg in hypotension or lactate ≥4 mmol/L
- Target:
- MAP ≥65 mmHg
- Urine output ≥0.5 mL/kg/hr
Vasopressors (if fluid refractory)
- First-line: Noradrenaline
- Add:
- Vasopressin (if refractory)
- Adrenaline (second-line)
2. ANTIBIOTIC THERAPY (START WITHIN 1 HOUR)
Common organisms
- Gram-negative: E. coli, Klebsiella
- Gram-positive: Enterococcus
- Anaerobes (less common but important in severe disease)
Empirical Antibiotics
Mild–Moderate (Community-acquired)
- Piperacillin–tazobactam
OR - Ceftriaxone + Metronidazole
Severe / Healthcare-associated / ICU
- Meropenem / Imipenem-cilastatin
± - Vancomycin (if Enterococcus/MRSA risk)
Special Situations
- Post-ERCP → cover resistant organisms
- Biliary stents → polymicrobial
- Immunocompromised → broader coverage
Duration
- 4–7 days after source control
- Longer if:
- Bacteremia
- Incomplete drainage
3. DEFINITIVE MANAGEMENT = SOURCE CONTROL
Antibiotics alone are NOT sufficient in most cases
ERCP (Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography) – GOLD STANDARD
Indications
- Moderate–severe cholangitis
- Persistent obstruction
- Failed conservative therapy
Procedures
- Sphincterotomy
- Stone extraction
- Stent placement
PTBD (Percutaneous Transhepatic Biliary Drainage)
Indications
- Failed ERCP
- Altered anatomy (e.g., post-surgery)
- Critically ill (bedside option)
Surgical Drainage
- Rare now
- Indications:
- ERCP/PTBD failure
- Complications (e.g., perforation)
TIMING OF BILIARY DRAINAGE
|
Severity |
Timing |
|
Grade III |
Immediate (within 6–12 hrs) |
|
Grade II |
Early (within 24 hrs) |
|
Grade I |
Elective (after stabilization) |
10. Complications
- Septic shock
- Liver abscess
- Acute kidney injury
- DIC
- Death (mortality up to 10–20%)
11. Differentials
|
Condition |
Key Difference |
|
Acute cholecystitis |
No jaundice |
|
Viral hepatitis |
ALT very high |
|
Pancreatitis |
Lipase ↑ |
|
PSC |
Chronic disease |
|
Obstructive jaundice without infection |
No fever |
