Background Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the accepted standard treatment for symptomatic gallstone disease. However, severe inflammation, fibrosis, adhesions, or anatomical distortion can obscure critical landmarks and increase the risk of bile duct injury. In such cases, timely recognition of operative difficulty and appropriate modification of technique are essential to ensure patient safety. Methods This prospective case series was conducted at a tertiary care center, R L Jalappa Hospital & Research Center, Tamaka, Karnataka, India, in 2024 and included seven adult patients whose intraoperative findings met predefined criteria for difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Demographic data, operative challenges, technical adaptations, postoperative outcomes, and 30-day follow-up findings were documented and analyzed descriptively. Results Operative difficulty was associated with a frozen Calot's triangle, dense omental or bowel adhesions, a mucocele with impacted stones, a short cystic duct, severe fibrosis, and vascular anomalies. Structured bailout strategies were employed based on intraoperative findings. These included fundus-first (dome-down) dissection, fenestrating subtotal cholecystectomy, selective partial cystic ductotomy for impacted stone retrieval, endoloop ligation of the cystic duct stump, and judicious drain placement. In one patient, transient postoperative jaundice resolved spontaneously without intervention. No bile duct injuries or major postoperative complications occurred. All patients recovered satisfactorily, and no delayed morbidity was identified at the 30-day follow-up. Conclusion Difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy requires vigilance, thorough anatomical knowledge, and the readiness to adapt the operative plan. Familiarity with bailout techniques and individualized intraoperative decision-making can prevent major biliary injuries and enable the safe completion of surgery, even in challenging operative fields.
Abstract
Journal Article
eng
42083708
Koripella, Srija, et al. "Conquering the Challenge: Difficult Gallbladders and Delicate Solutions." Cureus, vol. 18, no. 4, 2026, pp. e106388.
Koripella S, N N, B M, et al. Conquering the Challenge: Difficult Gallbladders and Delicate Solutions. Cureus. 2026;18(4):e106388.
Koripella, S., N, N., B, M., Dave, P., Ca, S., Prasad, K., Pn, S., & Hr, R. (2026). Conquering the Challenge: Difficult Gallbladders and Delicate Solutions. Cureus, 18(4), e106388. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.106388
Koripella S, et al. Conquering the Challenge: Difficult Gallbladders and Delicate Solutions. Cureus. 2026;18(4):e106388. PubMed PMID: 42083708.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR
T1 - Conquering the Challenge: Difficult Gallbladders and Delicate Solutions.
AU - Koripella,Srija,
AU - N,Naphene,
AU - B,Muktesh,
AU - Dave,Prakash,
AU - Ca,Shashirekha,
AU - Prasad,Krishna,
AU - Pn,Sreeramulu,
AU - Hr,Ravikiran,
Y1 - 2026/04/03/
PY - 2026/4/1/accepted
PY - 2026/5/5/medline
PY - 2026/5/5/pubmed
PY - 2026/5/5/entrez
PY - 2026/4/3/pmc-release
KW - bailout procedure
KW - cholelithiasis
KW - difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy
KW - gallstone cholecystitis
KW - post cholecystectomy bile duct injury
KW - subtotal laparoscopic cholecystectomy
SP - e106388
EP - e106388
JF - Cureus
JO - Cureus
VL - 18
IS - 4
N2 - Background Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the accepted standard treatment for symptomatic gallstone disease. However, severe inflammation, fibrosis, adhesions, or anatomical distortion can obscure critical landmarks and increase the risk of bile duct injury. In such cases, timely recognition of operative difficulty and appropriate modification of technique are essential to ensure patient safety. Methods This prospective case series was conducted at a tertiary care center, R L Jalappa Hospital & Research Center, Tamaka, Karnataka, India, in 2024 and included seven adult patients whose intraoperative findings met predefined criteria for difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Demographic data, operative challenges, technical adaptations, postoperative outcomes, and 30-day follow-up findings were documented and analyzed descriptively. Results Operative difficulty was associated with a frozen Calot's triangle, dense omental or bowel adhesions, a mucocele with impacted stones, a short cystic duct, severe fibrosis, and vascular anomalies. Structured bailout strategies were employed based on intraoperative findings. These included fundus-first (dome-down) dissection, fenestrating subtotal cholecystectomy, selective partial cystic ductotomy for impacted stone retrieval, endoloop ligation of the cystic duct stump, and judicious drain placement. In one patient, transient postoperative jaundice resolved spontaneously without intervention. No bile duct injuries or major postoperative complications occurred. All patients recovered satisfactorily, and no delayed morbidity was identified at the 30-day follow-up. Conclusion Difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy requires vigilance, thorough anatomical knowledge, and the readiness to adapt the operative plan. Familiarity with bailout techniques and individualized intraoperative decision-making can prevent major biliary injuries and enable the safe completion of surgery, even in challenging operative fields.
SN - 2168-8184
UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/prime/citation/42083708/Conquering_the_Challenge:_Difficult_Gallbladders_and_Delicate_Solutions.
DB - PRIME
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -


