Acute Calculous Cholecystitis Associated with Leptospirosis: Which is the Emergency? A Case Report and Literature Review
Renata Moriczi, Mircea Gabriel Muresan, Radu Neagoe, Daniela Sala, Arpad Torok, Tivadar Bara, Ioan Alexandru Balmos, Razvan Ion, Anca Meda Vasiesiu

TL;DR
A 66-year-old patient with acute calculous cholecystitis was found to have leptospirosis, highlighting the importance of considering this infection in similar cases.
Contribution
This case report is the first to document an association between leptospirosis and acute calculous cholecystitis.
Findings
Leptospirosis can present with symptoms mimicking acute calculous cholecystitis.
Treating leptospirosis led to remission of cholecystitis symptoms in the patient.
Accurate diagnosis requires considering leptospirosis in patients with relevant risk factors.
Abstract
Leptospirosis is a bacterium with a worldwide distribution and belongs to the group of zoonoses that can affect both humans and animals. Most cases of leptospirosis present as a mild, anicteric infection. However, a small percentage of cases develop Weil’s disease, characterized by bleeding and elevated levels of bilirubin and liver enzymes. It can also cause inflammation of the gallbladder. Acute acalculous cholecystitis has been described as a manifestation of leptospirosis in a small percentage of cases; however, no association between leptospirosis and acute acalculous cholecystitis has been found in the literature. In this report, we describe the case of a 66-year-old patient who presented to the emergency department with a clinical picture dominated by fever, an altered general condition, abdominal pain in the right hypochondrium, nausea, and repeated vomiting. Acute calculous…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLeptospirosis research and findings
