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Gallbladder torsion-induced emphysematous cholecystitis in a 16-year-old boy.

The patient was a 16-year-old boy who had turned to the right rapidly as he fielded a baseball that had come to him quickly. Two days after this event, which occurred in July 2004, he was admitted to hospital with repeated vomiting and increasing right hypochondralgia. Laboratory examination on admission showed elevation of the white blood count and of serum C-reactive protein and total bilirubin. Computed tomography on admission demonstrated an enlarged gallbladder and a thickened wall without gallstones, and magnetic resonance imaging performed 1 day later showed air within the gallbladder wall. His symptoms worsened, with a positive Murphy's sign, and emergency laparotomy was performed, with a diagnosis of emphysematous cholecystitis. Intraoperatively, the gallbladder was dark red, necrotic, distended, and enlarged. The cystic duct was attached only to the mesentery, and the gallbladder was floating freely, with the neck of the gallbladder having rotated 180 degrees counterclockwise, leading to a definitive diagnosis of gallbladder torsion with emphysematous cholecystitis. Cholecystectomy was performed, and analysis of bile showed Escherichia coli to be the causative organism. Histopathologic examination revealed necrotized cholecystitis. The patient is doing well 25 months after surgery, with an uneventful postoperative course.

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