Can you safely say that the patient doesn’t have cholecystitis? Can you discharge him for outpatient ultrasonography to assess for symptomatic cholelithiasis?
As bedside ultrasonography becomes more of a staple in Emergency Departments, it is easy to just perform the ultrasound yourself if such a patient presents. If you do not have an ED ultrasound available, however, you need to send this patient for a formal ultrasound because he is still very much at risk for cholecystitis despite having unremarkable lab tests and no fever.
JAMA published a meta-analysis of 17 studies on the test characteristics for cholecystitis. I found it odd that they defined a fever as temperature >35 Celsius. The best performing characteristic was a Murphy’s sign, although the positive likelihood ratio (LR) slightly crossed 1.0 (0.8-8.6).
PV Card: Diagnostic Testing for Cholecystitis
Adapted from [1]
Go to ALiEM (PV) Cards for more resources.
Reference
- Trowbridge RL, Rutkowski NK, Shojania KG. Does This Patient Have Acute Cholecystitis? JAMA. 2003;289(1). doi: 10.1001/jama.289.1.80
Author information
The post Paucis Verbis: Strength of diagnostic tests for cholecystitis appeared first on ALiEM.