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	<title>Symptom Advice .com &#187; duodenum</title>
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		<title>Mapping the body: gallbladder</title>
		<link>http://symptomadvice.com/mapping-the-body-gallbladder/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Nov 2011 13:51:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Symptom Advice</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[gallstones symptoms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[duodenum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[enzymes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gallbladder cancer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[political correctness]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Political correctness has reached medical school. Last week, I was talking to a student &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#119;&#104;&#097;&#116; sort of patients tend to be affected &#098;&#121; gallstones. I&#160;mentioned the handy, alliterative phrase &#098;&#121; &#119;&#104;&#105;&#099;&#104;, in my day, we used to remember this at-risk group, and was told in no uncertain terms that medical students didn&#8217;t talk like [...]]]></description>
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<p>Political correctness has reached medical school. Last week, I was talking to a student &#097;&#098;&#111;&#117;&#116; &#119;&#104;&#097;&#116; sort of patients tend to be affected &#098;&#121; gallstones. I&nbsp;mentioned the handy, alliterative phrase &#098;&#121; &#119;&#104;&#105;&#099;&#104;, in my day, we used to remember this at-risk group, and was told in no uncertain terms that medical students didn&#8217;t talk like that &#097;&#110;&#121; more.</p>
<p>The gallbladder &#105;&#115; a hollow pear-shaped organ, in the &#114;&#105;&#103;&#104;&#116; &#115;&#105;&#100;&#101; of the abdominal cavity. Its main job &#105;&#115; to store &#097;&#114;&#111;&#117;&#110;&#100; 50ml of bile, &#102;&#105;&#114;&#115;&#116; formed in the liver. After a meal, a hormone prompts the gallbladder to contract, releasing its contents into the duodenum. Once here, bile coats &#097;&#110;&#121; fat &#119;&#104;&#105;&#099;&#104; has been eaten, so facilitating digestion &#098;&#121; enzymes.</p>
<p>Cholangiocarcinoma (gallbladder cancer) &#105;&#115; the most serious disease to affect this organ. &#097;&#108;&#109;&#111;&#115;&#116; always a disease of &#111;&#108;&#100; age, it tends to be diagnosed &#097;&#116; a late stage, &#098;&#121; &#119;&#104;&#105;&#099;&#104; time the liver bed &#105;&#115; &#111;&#102;&#116;&#101;&#110; involved. This makes surgery difficult and the prognosis poor.</p>
<p>Gallstones are &#109;&#117;&#099;&#104; more common, formed &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; cholesterol, calcium and bile salts. Problems occur when the stones become too big to pass easily through the neck of the gallbladder, or&nbsp;when they get stuck in the duct that drains &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; the gallbladder into the duodenum. Symptoms may include a&nbsp;temperature, pain in the &#114;&#105;&#103;&#104;&#116; upper quarter of the abdomen and jaundice. &#115;&#111;&#109;&#101;&#116;&#105;&#109;&#101;&#115; the offending stone will pass &#098;&#121; itself. &#098;&#117;&#116; it may be &#110;&#101;&#099;&#101;&#115;&#115;&#097;&#114;&#121; to remove the gallbladder surgically.</p>
<p>Back when I trained, the arrival of a patient suffering &#102;&#114;&#111;&#109; abdominal pain &#119;&#104;&#111; happened to be &#8220;40, fat, fair, female and fertile&#8221; prompted a&nbsp;diagnosis of gallstones.</p>
<p>Gabriel Weston &#105;&#115; a surgeon and author of Direct Red: A Surgeon&#8217;s Story</p></p>
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