Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Sawbones: Gallstones
Episode Date: January 30, 2024Do you even know where your gallbladder is? Maybe it's not so surprising that millions of Americans don't know they have a gastrointestinal disorder caused by gallstones. Dr. Sydnee and Justin go thro...ugh the history of gallbladder disease, and why the icky medical mnemonic of "forty, fat, and fertile" is misleading and maybe even harmful.Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/
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Saw Bones is a show about medical history, and nothing the hosts say should be taken
as medical advice or opinion.
It's for fun.
Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil?
We think you've earned it.
Just sit back, relax, and enjoy a moment of distraction from that weird growth.
You're worth it. Alright, so I'm here to write some books.
One, two, one, two, three, four.
Hello everybody and welcome to Sawbones, a marital tour of misguided medicine. I'm your co-host Justin McElroy.
And I'm Sydney McElroy.
Hey.
Hey.
It's been calm.
The snow's melted.
In case you're looking for a snow update, the snow melted.
I'm sure that everybody was waiting to get their weather update from our weekly podcast.
Trap with our rotten children for four out of five days
last week, if you can believe it.
I love those days.
Someday you will look back on those days finally.
Okay, you, okay.
Is this a character you're playing?
Because the Sydney I know by day four was like,
I'm not doing great.
I need-
Well, the thing is like, this is the part,
they always tell you older parents,
like by older, I don't mean older in age.
I mean, like they have older kids.
They've already been through this period of parenting.
They will always tell you like,
oh, you'll miss these days.
Someday they won't wanna be around you.
Someday they'll be talking to their,
I don't know, whatever teenagers do.
Someday they'll be doing that.
They talk to chat, chat GPT. Right, they talk to chat GPT instead of AI.
Right, they talk to AI all day and they go hang out
with their Cylon friends instead of you.
And then you feel bad,
because then you're like, oh man, why didn't I appreciate it more?
I thought I was appreciating it,
but maybe I wasn't appreciated enough.
But what they don't tell you is that your kids,
even when they're little, they get sick of you too.
And they also get sick of being in the same place as you for a while.
Yes.
So like, even at our kids' age, after a while, they didn't want to be here.
Yeah.
And so then I don't know how to be like, I'm appreciating you.
I am trying to enjoy your finest days.
I'm enjoying your youth.
Why are you so upset?
And they're like, we want to leave the house.
Stop making your youth so crappy.
I'm trying to savor it. Stop making your youth so crappy. I'm trying to savor it.
Stop ruining your youth.
But we're here now.
And we're ready to talk with you
about a new medical mystery, malady.
Well, it's not, I wouldn't say it's a mystery.
It's a malady.
I don't know what the episode's about.
So I'm just giving the most general sort of like,
you know, a saw bones.
We got an email from Annie, thank you Annie,
titled, Fertile Fat and Forty.
Okay.
Was the title of this email,
which if you were in the medical world,
if you're in a healthcare field,
you may, especially as a physician,
you may have heard that in school.
Okay.
Okay, so like, and I assume outside of the medical world, I don't know why you would have heard that in school. Okay. Okay. So like, and I assume outside of the medical world,
I don't know why you would have heard that collection
of alliterative words.
This immediately caught my attention because I thought,
one, oh, we've never done an episode about gallstones.
Okay.
That's what we're gonna talk about.
Okay.
And I knew that that was the connection.
And two, I had this thought,
and I'm gonna explain all this, don't worry.
Okay.
This mnemonic device that this listener had put
in the title of the email is one that,
and by the way, our listener did not come up with this.
This is taught in medical schools.
And maybe other healthcare, maybe in nursing schools,
I don't know, but I was taught this.
So this is something that I don't know who first said it,
but it well predates any of us.
I started to wander because I think it's important to do so.
Just because I was told something,
especially something kind of like
that people think is clever and off the cuff
and not necessarily like,
like here's a fact that you're learning about something,
but here's this little like useful device to remember things.
I think sometimes it's good to stop and go, is that true?
Is that right? Do we know that's true?
And so that's what I want to talk about.
I'm going to talk about gallstones.
A lot of people have them.
A lot of people end up having their gallbladder removed.
I want to talk about that.
Like the frog, like the frog.
We were wondering about the frog getting boiled.
That was true.
Yes.
Would you like to share that? But you not a lame advice, but you know,
there's a thing about like how if you put a frog into water
and then you slowly increase the temperature,
you'll boil the frog and it won't jump out
because it doesn't notice.
It's sort of a metaphor for like,
I don't know, a slippery slope is maybe the best, like,
you know.
It's often used in like talking about like people
who were brainwashed or fell into sort of like a cult accidentally, like that if you if you pour hot water on somebody they know that it's hot water
but if you put them in room temperature water and slowly increase it they won't notice.
Sure version is if the water gets too hot the frog will jump out.
It is. Yeah it's not true the frog will not stay in there and get boiled.
I heard someone recently say that used I think it was on the trust someone used lobster getting boiled,
and it's like, well, like a lobster may or may not notice.
But a lobster can't jump out.
Yeah, a lobster's not going to jump out.
So you're just kind of reading into the lobster.
I don't know.
I don't know.
And in a lot of those cases in my experience, I've never done it myself,
but I've seen people boil lobster and they put a lid on, which that's not fair.
They don't even have, even if they can jump, we'll never know.
Anyway. Okay. So why would this email be titled
fertile fat and 40? Because when it came to gallstones, and I'm going to explain what
those are if you don't know, if you're not familiar, if you've heard of it, but you're
like, I don't really know what they are. When it came to learning about gallstones or cholelithiasis is the term we use.
That's the medical terminology.
Lithiasis litho referencing stone.
So you'll hear that litho that in like the removal
of kidney stones like lithotripsy, you hear stone.
Otolithiasis is when you have or otoliths
are the little crystals in your inner ear
that help you know your position in space,
lith that we're referencing stones.
So anyway, stones in your gallbladder.
We were taught in medical school
that there was a certain type of patient
that was at highest risk for developing gallstones.
And so a good way to remember it
and the purpose of this mnemonic is so
if a person walks in with stomach pain,
with abdominal pain, and they
meet these criteria, then you should put gallstones high on your list of differential diagnoses.
Okay.
That's the purpose of this, purportedly.
But what they taught us is that white cis women in their 40s who have had children
and were overweight are at highest risk
for developing gallstones.
And so the way that we were supposed to remember that
was female, fair, fertile, fat, 40.
That collection of Fs to help us remember
who gets gallstones.
I think you're forgetting one, friend.
That makes you think, doesn't it?
I guess people aren't just their diagnosis there,
Dr. McRoy.
Well, I mean, you're making my point.
People aren't their diagnosis and is this even accurate?
French.
French.
Well, you know the other one that I was taught in school?
What?
Flatulent.
Oh, okay, well.
Because a symptom could be gassiness.
We can all come up with that for it. So anyway, I want you to think about that
Pneumonic and sort of like when I said those words, if you are the kind of person who can visualize things, if you're not as we've recently learned,
some people cannot visualize, some people cannot see images in their brain. If you can, then you may have pictured the patient walking
in holding their stomach, who fits all this criteria,
who you're going to say like,
ah, I learned in medical school,
you must have gallbladder disease, I know.
Is that true?
Is it a helpful mnemonic?
What does that do to your diagnostic process?
What do you assume about somebody when they walk in saying
I have abdominal pain if you know this mnemonic and what, how might that interfere with the
care that they're going to receive? I think is a really useful thing to ask. First of
all, Justin, do you know anything about the gallbladder? You're really thinking, you're like really digging into your,
do you know where it is?
I have absolutely no idea where or what, honey.
This, I'm just realizing this little guy pie has been
in my body trucking along for 43 odd years.
And I have no idea where it is.
I don't know if I have one.
You do.
I don't know what it's doing.
Do you know where your liver is?
Okay.
So you're referencing your entire abdomen.
Okay.
If you divide your abdomen into quadrants, four places,
yeah, the right upper, there's your liver.
Okay.
Your gallbladder is nestled snugly,
right sorta under it, up against it.
Yep.
We're just big bags of little organs.
We are just big bags of organs.
So that's where, so your gallbladder is a little sack there
and it holds bile.
And it's this little guy who's just like,
he squished right up against the liver.
He just hangs out right there with the liver.
I'm embarrassed.
I feel like one of those people,
when they tell them to get up on a map and find Algeria,
and I'm like, ooh, okay.
Yeah.
It's maybe, I didn't know,
I didn't know anything about the gallbladder,
or gallbladder.
That's okay.
A lot of people don't, other than that,
I think most people know this.
Can you live without your gallbladder?
Yes.
Okay, yeah, I think that it's one of the organs
we know we can live without.
I think that's about all most people know about it.
So anyway, so it's a tiny organ that holds bile,
which is a liquid that helps you digest food.
Okay, so what the way that it fits,
and this is kind of important to know,
like if something goes wrong,
why do you have the symptoms you have?
So it's a little bag and it's got a little tube
caught a duct off the end of it.
And that duct connects into a bigger duct, a bigger pipe.
So it's sort of like, I mean, this is all plumbing.
There's the big pipe that comes out of the liver,
which it has its own little divisions,
but we won't get into that.
There's a big pipe that comes down out of the liver
and on its way down into the small intestine,
because that's where it connects with the duodenum.
And then on its way down, the gallbladder duct
connects into it.
It feeds into the big pipe of the common bile duct.
Okay, got it.
Yes.
And the pancreatic duct is also gonna feed
further downstream into this big duct.
And the whole thing is gonna feed into the duodenum through
the ampula of Vader
Okay, I thought you'd like that. Yeah, that's what it's called the ampula of Vader. Yeah, okay VAT er though
So not Darth. No, I know, okay
Anyway, that's how the bile from the gallbladder is going to get down into your intestines
and help you digest food.
Okay.
Gotcha, does that make sense?
It's just like a little extra,
just like a little, it just squirts it in.
It squirts it in.
Okay, got it.
It literally does eject,
like it has an ejection fraction just like your heart does,
meaning that like it squeezes and ejects it, squirts it.
Okay.
It also just sort of oozes, but like it squirts.
Gotcha, gotcha.
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. It also just sort of oozes, but like it squirts. Gotcha. Gotcha. Yeah.
Okay.
Goldstones are little masses, little stones,
little free floating things that form inside the gallbladder.
They can be made up of different things.
The most common thing they're made up of is cholesterol.
So if there is a excess cholesterol within this bile fluid that is being created
in your liver and that your gallbladder is storing, if there's excess bile in there,
then you will precipitate out these stones. Like if you have a lot of solids within a
liquid, they start to connect and form solid masses
and float up out of it.
And that happens a lot of, yes, and that forms a gallstone.
Now, they're not always made of cholesterol.
That's the most common.
They can be made of like,
if you have some condition that causes you to break down
red blood cells in an abnormal fashion,
they can be made of like the pigments
from the broken down blood cells.
So you can have what bio pigments is what we call them.
So you can have those in there.
There are calcium ones and specific,
and these get more specific to like,
you have some other condition that is causing you
to have more of these things, right?
And then they precipitate out in your gallbladder.
So you have these stones,
about 10 to 15%
of people have these stones and that varies by age and ethnicity. But generally speaking, 10 to 15%
of people have gallstones. Only 15 to 25% of those people who have gallstones are actually are ever
going to have symptoms from them. So just having gallstones doesn't necessarily mean...
So you may just be rocking around with gallstones,
have no clue, no problem.
Exactly.
And actually, the way that,
a really interesting way that you find this out
in medical school is sometimes
when you're on your surgical rotation,
sometimes they have an ultrasound
and they show you how we ultrasound the gallbladder
to look for stones, which that's a sneak peek.
How do we figure out if you have stones in your gallbladder?
Most commonly we ultrasound you.
Like just like an ultrasound, they take the little wand, they put some jelly on it, and
they, if you're pregnant, they rub it around on your belly and look for the baby.
They can rub it around on the part of your abdomen where your gallbladder is and look
at your gallbladder.
And there are stones in there.
And you say that's called a sneak peak?
You're getting a sneak peak of the gallbladder?
Well, I'm giving you a sneak peak as to how we diagnose it.
Okay.
I was supposed to be later, but I'm going to go ahead and tell you now.
Oh, it'll be our little secret.
So we do an ultrasound.
Sometimes on your surgery rotation,
they stick an ultrasound probe on one of the medical students
to show you how we do this,
and you find out that the medical student had gallstones.
This was not me, but one of my fellow students
was diagnosed with gallstones on their rotation.
Now they had never had symptoms.
They had no idea.
So it was what we call-
I was not irritating.
Right?
And now they just know.
So it's what we would call an incidental finding.
Incidentally.
You just incidentally just so you know.
Which is useful in the sense that if this person
ever develops golf, like the types of symptoms
that I'm gonna tell you that are related to gallstones,
then they already know they have gallstones
and they may be more likely to go and say,
hey, medical provider, I already know I have this
and now I'm having these symptoms that fits that.
So. Save you some time.
Yeah.
They're like I said, it's extremely prevalent
some time. Yeah.
They're, like I said, it's extremely prevalent
and there are a lot of people over 6.3 million females
and 14.2 million males in the United States
between the ages of 20 and 74 have gallstones.
Okay.
Prevalence increases with age, by the way.
So like if you get to over 60, a quarter of women have.
Oh man.
Gallstones, yeah.
So, and like I said, they can be made of different things.
And so they're specific and you may have some underlying,
you know, condition aside from gallstones
that makes you like I said,
break down red blood cells differently.
And actually that will also change the color
of the gallstones, not that it would matter to you.
If you have gallstones,
I don't think you really care what color they are.
No.
But like they'd be darker and black if you and black if they're made of more bile pigment.
But anyway, so you may know because of another condition
that you're seeing a doctor for
that you're at higher risk for gallstones
of these other types.
High cholesterol is a risk factor for the majority of us
because that's a more common condition, right?
Right.
So like I said, it is critical that you remember
that most gallstones are not symptomatic.
Most people who have them don't even know they have them
because they've never had a problem from them.
However, sometimes those stones,
because they're rolling around in this sack
can work their way down into the duct,
the opening, the little tube.
Oh, we hate that.
That already sounds uncomfortable.
Right. And they can block that flow.
That's when you start to have symptoms.
Because you're not getting.
Well, one, the bile isn't getting through,
but also as it squeezes, it's squeezing a stone.
OK, I guess I'm confused.
Can you help me?
I'm sure you've explained it, but I'm trying to.
Why do you need the bile?
It helps you break down food. Got it. Okay. Good. So you're basically if I had a guess and I don't know
Do you like you're not digesting as well, right?
Well, that is part of it
But the more the more acute problem the bigger is the backup of the body
Right that in this like squeezing action
and backup of vial is going to lead to inflammation
within the gallbladder over time.
And the other thing is that it just hurts
when you have those stones blocking the duct
and it's trying to squeeze it out
and it can't around the stone.
So you start to get like what we call biliary colic
is the term we use for it because it's colicky meaning it comes and goes. to get like what we call biliary colic
is the term we use for it,
because it's colic, meaning it comes and goes,
it's like this achy, crampy pain right in that area,
the right upper quadrant of your abdomen.
It's usually after you eat,
because that's when there's food in there,
it's triggering the release of these digestive enzymes
and everything, so it's triggering the release of bile,
that's when your gallbladder's trying to do its thing.
So that's when you get the symptoms.
You eat something, oh, I'm getting this weird, crampy pain in this area.
And you might feel like gassy and bloated and all of that along with it.
Some nausea is very common, maybe even some vomiting.
And the pain is usually what people, the pain is what I hear first, the pain, and then they
name all these other symptoms, but the pain is what brings people in.
Could I, would you allow me to brief the version? I think the human body is so wild. Do you think
about the fact that, like, whatever forces you think got us to this point, it doesn't really
matter to me, but those forces, they were like, well, we shouldn't have any of this stuff in the
body. It feels bad and it's gross and bile is just yucky.
Do we all agree that we don't want that?
Like, yeah, let's get it out.
And then somebody's like, well, some of it would be good sometimes to help
break down food, but we don't need a lot of it.
And they're like, well, I know, but it's kind of embarrassing that we need it.
Like, well, what if we hit it?
We'll hide it under the liver.
So that way nobody will notice.
And you'll just have this little bit in you,
just this reserved valve of yuckiness
that will hide from you under the liver.
So you don't really have to worry about it.
That's wild. It's wild that it worked out that way.
It's really important, like when it comes to a lot of the visceral organs,
it's really important that the stuff that's in them
is only in them or flows through the appropriate outflow tract.
Because there are things within various organs in your body
that like would be very damaging or harmful
where they to just like build up an uncontrolled amounts
or spread to other places, right?
Like, I mean, we have acid in our stomach.
Like, you know what I mean?
So like, it's the compartmentalization
of these different materials is crucial to our design.
Yeah, I mean, I love seeing myself
as just a big science fair, Paul K. Now,
if you shook me the right way, I would just pop.
That's great.
I love that.
That's a great image for me.
Let me tell you real quick.
So I told you what symptoms you might have.
And especially-
The pain is the main one.
The pain is the first one.
The pain and then like nausea, vomiting,
gassy, bloaty.
And then, and it can be worse if you eat a meal
that's really high in like fat or something
that can trigger more of that release.
And so like, yeah, if you eat a bunch of bile,
and then the pain, I think this is interesting.
It can actually, so it's in that right upper area
of your stomach.
It can also be sort of central in the upper stomach,
but it can go up to like your right shoulder blade.
Whoa.
So I think that's kind of interesting
that that's where it radiates to.
When we do an exam to like try to diagnose
that this is a gallbladder issue,
we look for something called Murphy sign.
What's Murphy sign?
Murphy sign is we push kind of hard.
This is what we would call deep palpation.
And we're gonna push firmly on your right upper quadrant,
right under your rib cage,
and you're going to inhale,
and then you're gonna say, ow.
Ow.
And if you say, ow.
Crumbs.
If you say, ow, that's a positive.
Zoons that hurts.
Some people don't say, ow, so you have to ask,
like, did it hurt, and you were just being tough.
And you'll usually see that deep inspiration.
That's the other part of it.
Is that what's called deep inspiration?
I got it.
No, no, like, no, I mean like.
I figured it out.
Inspired to know that my cobblers messed up.
Not inspired, like breathing in.
Yeah, like we were inspired.
No.
Like Eureka.
Not inspiration like that.
Inspiration like the opposite of expiration. Yeah, like Eureka. Not inspiration, like that inspiration, like the opposite of expiration.
Yeah, I mean.
Like breathing in.
But honey.
It's like a gas.
This is you and me here.
If somebody gasps in pain when you push there,
then their gallbladder's messed up.
That's what I'm trying to say.
It's just you and me here.
You know no one says that outside of your people.
Well, I know.
I try to use the medical term and then explain it. That's why I'm trying to I understand you can't have inspiration
Us creative types have already claimed it. Look at the world of them like the world of imagination
Like think of figment. That's inspiration. But we came up have it for breathing in
Just say breathing in
But we came up with uh with all these new monics.
That's pretty creative.
Oh, yeah.
That takes a lot of inspiration.
Yeah, I love how you refer to people as fat, fancy, and free, and they have gallbladders.
Thank you.
As a fat person, we're loving it over here.
I'm going to criticize this.
I'm just trying to get there.
You're taking a long time to criticize it.
I would have gotten the criticism in early.
Okay.
I, when I asked you...
It's 23 minutes in.
When I asked you if you knew what the gallbladder was and you said no.
So you had to take a brief educational detour.
Well, I felt like that it was key to understanding the entire episode that you knew about the gallbladder and gallstones and how it all hooked up together.
If you didn't know, then maybe a lot of other listeners didn't know either.
Yeah, that is my function here.
Because, I mean, it's also kind of complicated because, like I said, it's a whole system of
pipes. So when you just block the pipe to the gallbladder with a stone, you get some symptoms.
If that stone manages to get through that pipe into the big pipe, the common bile duct.
And, but if it blocks off that, then you get jaundice.
You get a backup of bile and you turn yellow and then you get, and then it,
you can get much sicker.
So like these can be big deals.
Gotcha.
Right.
Okay.
What do we do about it?
And how did we figure that out?
I'm going to tell you, but first I'm going to take you to the billing department. Let's go. Okay. What do we do about it and how did we figure that out?
I'm gonna tell you, but first I'm gonna take you to the billing department.
Let's go.
The medicines, the medicines,
that I still let my guard for the mouth.
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Okay, I got the gallstones.
Um, I'm fun, funky, freaky.
You know I got gallstones.
I'm flighty, I'm flirtatious, I'm free.
Yes. Okay. I'm going to tell you what to do about them then.
Fur line.
Do you know, by the way, the first gallstones we found were in like a mummy from Egypt from like 1500 BCE.
So we've known, like we've had gallstones for a really long time.
I would just assume it's regular stones at that point. It's so old.
They are gallstones for a really long time. I would just assume it's regular stones at that point. It's so old. They're gallstones.
The first time we started writing about them
in the medical literature,
there was a woman who passed away,
who had had abdominal pain and a pathologist,
a Florentine pathologist, Antonio Benavienni in 1420,
wrote an account of finding these stones
and saying like, hey, maybe this had something to do with this.
This person has rocks in this weird thing
I found under the liver.
This seems bad.
And so you see like more descriptions of this
and people starting to connect like what biliary colic is
throughout, especially like throughout the 1600s.
They're not really doing anything about it necessarily.
It's just like, oh yeah, you got those rocks.
I hope you don't die.
There was a gallstone surgery
that accidentally happened in 1687.
There was a surgeon, Stalpert Vonderwheel,
who was operating on a patient who had peritonitis, meaning like all this pus collecting
within the abdominal cavity basically,
had an infection in there.
And they were accidentally found to have gallstones
that were kind of removed in the process.
That was not the goal, but you figured out like,
hey, we could maybe take these
gallstones out.
We still don't know exactly how to do it.
But probably don't need them.
No, we don't need the gallstones.
We knew we didn't need the gallstones.
The problem is that like it wouldn't occur to you that you
don't need an organ yet.
Right.
That's true.
There's a big leap here that we have to take at some point,
which is.
Hey guys, you're gonna think I'm wild.
I don't think we need this thing. I don't think think I'm wild. I don't think we need this thing.
I don't think we need this thing.
I don't think we need this thing.
I mean, think about that.
Like somebody had to make that call.
I don't think we need this thing.
Let's take it out and see what happens.
It's really little.
Honey, that would surprise me if it happened like today.
Like 150, 100 years ago, everybody's getting buck wild.
Like everybody's doing wild stuff like that.
So Jean-Louis Petit was the first one to do
like a type of surgery aimed at alleviating
this gallbladder issue back in 1733.
We were not yet removing the gallbladder.
That wouldn't come for a little bit.
But the idea was maybe we can just drain it
and take out the stones.
So the way that you would do that,
and by the way, he came up with this idea in like 1733.
It took him like 10 years to get it right.
But basically you would try to adhere the gallbladder to the abdominal wall and you could do this by like
making a little stitch, like
reaching down through the wall of the abdomen into the gallbladder and then like attaching it to the wall.
These days we have Velcro so it would be a lot easier presumably.
You wanted something to stick the wall of the days we have Velcro, so it would be a lot easier, presumably.
You wanted something to stick the wall of the gallbladder up against the stomach wall,
the abdominal wall, okay?
And then that what starts to happen naturally when things rub against each other like that,
you can get what you call adhesions.
These are actually complications after a surgery because after a surgery everything's inflamed
and touching each other in ways it doesn't normally.
You can develop these like abnormal little bands of tissue
between two things, and sometimes they can even cause pain.
In this case, you want those to form,
because if it's sort of like suctioned up against the wall,
you can cut a hole in the wall and right into the gallbladder,
and you don't have to worry about stuff oozing out
into the abdominal cavity.
Does that make sense?
You're creating a fistula.
Do you remember the fistula?
Sure, sure, sure, sure.
Okay, you're creating that.
Creating your own little access port.
And this was, and actually the way he figured this out
is that he accidentally did this the first time.
He thought somebody had an abscess,
like a collection of pus in the wall of their abdomen.
And so he cut into it,
but he was cutting into a gallbladder.
Ooh, okay, yikes.
Anyway, so that was what they did at the time.
They would try to get the gallbladder
to stick to the abdominal wall
and then cut into the wall, drain out all the fluid
and pick out all the gallstones.
And then that was the way that we treat it.
This is a cholecystostomy
Meaning we're making a hole in the gallbladder when you're doing any sort of ostomy you're making a hole somewhere. Okay, okay
So that's what he started doing you sew the gallbladder to the wall. It's like a two-stage thing
You wait until you assure some adhesions have formed and then you pluck everything out of there. And you see descriptions of surgeries after that
where patients or where doctors were starting to perform
this cholecystostomy.
And this was becoming sort of like the standard of care
because people were living through this.
I mean, and we're still like at this point,
we are moving from like the late 1700s into the 1800s.
And it would really be like 1867
when a doctor, John Bobs in Indianapolis would like do this
and the patient would live and he could write it up
and everything went well.
I mean, it took a long time
because we're still like pre-anesthesia, right?
Right.
So, and pre-sterile technique.
Pre a lot of stuff.
Yeah.
It was pretty good.
So as we're developing this way
of managing gallbladder disease,
like very clearly this is how we manage it.
We cut a hole, we drain everything out of there, we're good.
There were other people who were interested in the idea
of like, well, maybe there's a better way.
And they were looking at research
that had actually been done back in the 1600s
by two Italian surgeons who removed gallbladders from animals
in order to see could these animals live without their gallbladders. And so all the way back in
the 1600s, we kind of knew that like it looks like in animal models, you can survive without a gallbladder.
So instead of like this whole big thing
where we create this big hole in your abdominal wall
and it takes a while and we have to form adhesions
and all this, could we maybe just get rid of the gallbladder?
The first person to do that was a different surgeon,
Dr. Carl Johann August Langenbuch,
who was the first one to, after studying all of this
and practicing on cadavers,
removed a gallbladder from a 43 year old man
who had gallbladder disease.
And the patient, after six weeks in the hospital,
was discharged.
Hey. So he lived.
Hey, not bad.
He reported on it in 1882, so that's where we are in history.
But a lot of people were still nervous about it.
Like we, by this point, we had really established a protocol for a cholecystostomy.
We knew how to do it.
You're gonna take a whole organ out.
So what they started doing is auditing. we knew how to do it, you're gonna take a whole organ out.
So what they started doing is auditing.
Okay, well, we've got a surgeon over here
doing cholecystectomies, meaning we're ectomy,
we're taking it out, we've got people doing cholecystostomies,
meaning we punched a hole in there.
Let's compare who's doing better.
And right at this point, we're comparing mortality.
So like nowadays, when we compare like
which procedures better,
certainly mortality is part of that,
but like we don't expect that a bunch of people
are dying from the procedure.
We expect like how fast was their recovery?
Did their symptoms return?
How, you know, were there complications?
Like we're looking at, it's more nuanced.
Back then it was like how many people lived
and the cholecystectomy was the superior procedure.
It was the one that was definitely being shown
to be more effective and you were more likely
to live through even back then.
So at that point that became really the standard of care.
And of course, as with any procedure in surgical history,
if you have a patient or if you have a surgery
that seems pretty good before we have sterile technique
and great anesthesia,
once we have the invention of sterile technique
and great anesthesia, the procedure becomes much, much better.
So obviously the procedure was refined over time,
as all surgeries were, and became something
that was pretty commonplace to do.
The only real change that has happened since then
was in 1987.
At this point in surgical history,
we have the rise of laparoscopic surgery,
meaning we make tinier incisions and we use a camera
to look inside the abdomen while we're doing the procedure
with instruments called trocars,
instead of just making a big hole and putting our hands in there.
Okay.
So we're already using that a lot in gynecological surgeries,
like hysterectomies and things like that.
And in this specific example,
there's a French doctor who's doing a laparoscopic procedure on a gynecologic
laparoscopic procedure on a gynecologic laparoscopic procedure on a patient and while he's in there
he notices that
She has gallstones and he notices that the gallbladder looks inflamed I should say okay
So as long as he's in there he goes ahead and uses his laparoscopic equipment to take her gallbladder out honey
This is wild this should it shouldn't be like this. No, there's something. This is 1987,
by the way. Yeah, there's just no way like it's wild. Do you think this cat's like looking around
like I don't think anybody noticed. I'm just gonna, as long as I'm in here, let me just pop that
is that how medical history goes? Well, she had had real quick and hold it right there? I mean, and by all accounts, it was like,
she was fine with it
because she had had symptoms from them.
Like she was having issues from her gallbladder
and he fixed it while he was in there.
I mean, honestly, in my experience,
a lot of people will say,
hey, as long as I'm here, can you do ABC or D?
As long as I'm out, can you pierce my kids' ears?
As long as they're out getting their tonsils removed,
that kind of thing.
Well, I mean, healthcare is so,
it's such a bad system that's so difficult to navigate.
It takes a long time.
Sorry, I know that we have a capitalist medical system.
It does take a long time to get care.
There it is.
It does.
I know that the myth is that you can get it so fast
because we're all the for profit.
No, it takes a long time. And once you get in and you're gonna pay a bunch
and once you meet your deductible,
because that's how insurance works here,
you'll wanna get all that you can
because it's so crazy expensive.
So yeah, I mean, it kind of makes sense.
And there was a huge demand by the way.
Patients were like, I want it that way.
I want the laparoscopic one.
I wanted that.
The incisions are so much smaller,
the recovery is quicker, it's easy.
I mean, there's so many things about it that are easier.
Honey, you sold me, I'll get it.
Well, but it was like, it started to happen
even before it became the standard of care
because it wouldn't become the standard until 1992.
What does that mean?
But you already meaning like,
we have standards that tell like,
they're basically used to tell other people,
are we doing the best,
like the best medical knowledge has to offer
for this right now.
And so in my practice, I follow standards of care.
If you come in with, you know, diabetes
and you need me to manage you,
I am going to prescribe the medicines
and do the things for you that medical standards say
are the best care I can provide at this moment.
And there's change as medical knowledge evolves, right?
As new drugs or procedures come out.
You're saying people were doing that before everybody agreed that it was the best thing?
Before 1992 when everybody says, yes, we should do this. So if you have gallstones at this time,
one, statistically you probably don't know. And if you're not having symptoms, there's really no
evidence that we should do anything about them. So if you do just randomly get an ultrasound
this season and you're fine, we should probably just leave them alone.
That is what, that is generally speaking the best care at the moment.
If you're having symptoms from them, we, multiple episodes of this, then taking your gallbladder
out, not cutting a hole in it, but taking it out is generally speaking the best thing
we can do.
And then there are people who kind of fall in between, who for some reason may be a higher
risk for surgery or they've only had an episode
They're not sure if they want surgery and there is a medication or sedial that you can take
That's supposed to help dissolve those stones for you
It's like 30 to 50% effective
So it may help some and if for some reason surgery is a really big
You know is not an easy thing for that patient. It may be a kind of a stopgap measure or another option.
Okay.
The 5 Fs.
Yes, that's what got us here.
There was a study in the British Medical Journal in 1950
that said this pneumonic is not very helpful.
This is how long we've known
that this pneumonic is not very helpful.
And you've still been learning it the whole time.
While younger people with gallbladder disease
are more likely to be female,
as we get older, men are more likely to have gallbladder disease are more likely to be female, as we get older, men are more likely
to have gallbladder disease.
White people do not have the highest rate
of gallbladder disease.
So that whole fare that it's usually a white person,
that is not, that's just not true.
I mean, anybody can have gallbladder disease.
Yes.
After the age of 50, whether or not you had kids
has nothing to do with it.
During pregnancy, there's some things that can happen
with your digestion and slowing of your bile release
that could predispose you to developing gallstones.
So there is a connection to pregnancy
and gallbladder disease, but this idea that like people
who never had kids are much less likely
to develop gallbladder disease, that is not true.
After the age of 50, it doesn't matter if you've had kids or not, you might develop gallbladder disease, that is not true. After the age of 50, it doesn't matter
if you've had kids or not,
you might get gallbladder disease, you might not.
The idea that weight is tied to that,
this is based on the assumption
that because most stones are precipitated from cholesterol,
that if you are overweight, you eat more cholesterol.
That is where that comes from.
That's very outdated.
Yes, it is based on an outdated and stigmatizing assumption
about the eating patterns of someone who is overweight or obese.
That is where that comes from.
If any correlation is made, it is with weight going up and down rapidly.
So this is actually true for somebody
who has lost a lot of weight very rapidly.
That can lead to complications that result in gallstones.
Fluctuating.
So yes, your weight fluctuating rapidly could-
No, that's an F.
Oh, there you go, fluctuating.
Hey, yes, but it is not,
there is no causative relationship
between being overweight or obese and developing gallstones.
So it's not true.
And a stronger predictor is family history
and that's nowhere in the mnemonic.
And it's an F.
It could be, it's an F, but we didn't say that.
Fluctuating family history.
So the mnemonic is not helpful.
And I think the bigger thing is that it also,
it locked me into, I know this idea of picturing
the type of patient who developed gallbladder disease
based on some outright falsehood, some misconceptions
and then just some like misunderstanding and stigma
and definitely stigma.
And I think generally speaking, we know that people who are overweight or obese
are neglected often by the medical community.
Their complaints are tied to weight,
whether or not they have anything to do with that.
They're often used as that,
that weight is used as a scapegoat, so to speak,
for whatever complaints they have.
They do not get the same care
as people who are not overweight or obese.
We also know that female patients, complaints, especially of pain, are generally undertreated,
under managed, under listened to, disregarded by the medical community.
Not everybody, not always, but generally speaking, these are truths.
And so now we have further stigmatized and limited the way we're going to think about
this group of patients because we've been taught an unhelpful untrue mnemonic that
will make me assume something about you before I take the time to sit down and do my due
diligence and make sure that if you do, if it is gallbladder fine, but maybe it's something
else and I'm going to ignore it because of the five Fs.
All right.
Thank you, Sydney, for clearing that up for me.
You're welcome.
Thank you to our listener, Annie, for the email because I had never taken the time to dig into it.
And I'm really glad that I did and that we could dispel those myths and talk about gallbladders.
That is going to do it for us for this week.
Thanks to the taxpayers for the use of their song Medicines as the intro and outro of our program.
And thanks to you for listening.
We sure appreciate it.
Uh, again, that is going to do it for us until next time.
My name is Justin McElroy.
I'm Sydney McElroy.
And as always, don't drill a hole in your head. Alright! Yeah!