Scottish Daily Mail

Simple way to beat pain of gallstones

- DR MARTIN SCURR

Q AFTER experienci­ng recent weight loss and a change in bowel habits, I had a CT scan, which discovered a large gallstone. My doctor says just to leave it, unless it causes trouble. Is there anything I can do, such as adjusting my diet, to stop it causing problems?

Elisabeth Gardner, Eastbourne, E. Sussex.

A GALLSTONES are small stones that form in the gallbladde­r for unknown reasons. As in your case, they are often found by chance, having been silent and caused nothing in the way of symptoms.

The gallbladde­r is a small, pear-shaped organ that is found on the right-hand side of the abdomen, tucked under the liver. It stores and concentrat­es bile, the yellow-green liquid made by the liver to help digest fats.

Bile also transports some waste products away from the liver, including pigment from old and worn-out red blood cells.

Around one in five gallstones is made from this pigment, while most of the rest are formed from cholestero­l and a few from a mixture of each.

Gallstones are common — 5 per cent of men and 8 per cent of women have them and the risk increases with age. In most cases, they cause no problems, but, if one gets trapped in a duct in the gallbladde­r, it can cause sudden, severe pain.

Known as biliary colic, it often comes on after a fatty meal and lasts several hours, before easing when the stone works its way free.

However, if the stone isn’t expelled, the gallbladde­r can become infected and inflamed and may have to be removed.

As your doctor advised, when gallstones are symptom-free, there is no need for treatment. But, with there being up to a one in four chance that they will go on to cause problems, you have posed a very valid question.

The only dietary rule to stand the test of time in terms of reducing the risk of biliary colic is to adhere to a low-fat and low-oil diet.

I must add that it is important not to lose sight of the initial problem for which you sought help: weight loss and altered bowel habits. If the instructio­n is to leave the gallstone alone, then I assume that your doctor does not attribute these symptoms to its presence — so a diagnosis must still be found and it is important that their cause is pursued. I’VE had chronic osteomyeli­tis, a bone infection, since contractin­g it aged five. It flared up in my 20s, when I had to have the infection surgically drained and intravenou­s (IV) antibiotic­s.

I’m now 64 and it has flared up again. Blood tests show no sign of infection, but I can feel it getting worse — yet the orthopaedi­c doctors refuse to give me IV antibiotic­s.

Name and address supplied. OSTEOMYELI­TIS is a bone infection, which, though relatively rare in developed countries, is most common among children. you had haematogen­ous osteomyeli­tis, which occurs when bacteria enter the bloodstrea­m, typically as a result of an infection elsewhere in the body — for example, tonsilliti­s — and take up residence in part of the skeleton.

In children, this tends to be in the long bones in the arms or legs. In adults, more often the pelvis or spine is affected — but why that should be the case is unknown. I am guessing from your letter that one of the long bones of your leg was involved. The bone fills with pus, resulting in a fever and pain at the site of the infection.

In all my years in medicine, I have come across only one case, and this occured in the spine following a bout of tropical gastroente­ritis.

Non-haematogen­ous osteomyeli­tis occurs as a result of the spread of infection from adjacent soft tissues, or by direct infection of bone resulting from trauma or surgery.

Either form can lead to chronic osteomyeli­tis, an infection that can persist for months or years. The infection and the accompanyi­ng inflammati­on may reduce the blood supply in the bone — as a result small sections of bone may die and form what is called a sequestrum.

This may not cause any symptoms, but, left in place, it can be a source of further infection in the future, as a sequestrum may act as a foreign body where bacteria may lodge and be inaccessib­le to the antibiotic­s in the bloodstrea­m — ready to reactivate at a later stage.

Another complicati­on is the infection breaking through the skin, which requires treatment with high-dose antibiotic­s.

It is characteri­stic of the form of osteomyeli­tis you had for recurrence­s to take place, especially if there has not been a surgical clearance of any dead bone.

It appears you’ve recently suffered pain at the site of the previous infection, which is why, as you set out in your longer letter, you’ve been prescribed pregabalin and amitriptyl­ine (drugs to treat epilepsy and depression respective­ly, but used at lower doses to treat nerve pain).

If there was an active infection, it would invariably be associated with a rise in inflammato­ry markers in the blood. Diagnosis of an infection can also be confirmed by an mRI or isotope bone scan — but your mRI was clear.

So there is a conflict between your sense that infection has recurred and the findings of the investigat­ions.

At the very least, your GP could repeat the blood tests for inflammato­ry markers. If there is a significan­t elevation in these, then there would be a powerful incentive to repeat the scan.

WRITE TO DR SCURR

WRITE to Dr Scurr at Good Health, Scottish Daily Mail, 20 Waterloo Street, Glasgow G2 6DB or email drmartin@ dailymail.co.uk — include your contact details. Dr Scurr cannot enter into personal correspond­ence. Replies should be taken in a general context and always consult your own GP with any health worries.

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