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In-person class cancellation and work-from-home / Annulation des cours en présentiel et télétravail

Updated: Tue, 03/10/2026 - 17:14
In-person class cancellation and work-from-home / Annulation des cours en présentiel et télétravail. McGILL ALERT! Due to freezing rain all in-person classes and activities on Wednesday, March 11, will be cancelled. Staff are asked not to come to campus tomorrow unless they are required on site by their supervisor to perform necessary functions and activities. See your 91 email for more information.
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ALERTE McGILL! En raison de la pluie verglaçante, tous les cours et activités en présentiel prévus pour le mercredi 11 mars sont annulés. Nous demandons au personnel de ne pas se présenter sur le campus demain, à moins que leur superviseur ne leur demande d’être sur place pour accomplir des fonctions ou activités nécessaires au fonctionnement du campus. Pour plus d’informations, veuillez consulter vos courriels de 91.

54 Gallstone ileus

Gallstone ileus
Age/sex: 41-year-old female
Size: 13.5 x 14.5 x 8.4 cm
A segment of small bowel contains a white, egg-shaped gall stone. The proximal bowel lumen is markedly dilated (compare with the unopened distal bowel lumen — arrow).


Gallstone ileus

Gallstone ileus is a rare complication of cholelithiasis (stones in the gallbladder). It occurs when a stone (usually greater than 2.5 cm in diameter) passes through a fistula between the gallbladder and the adjacent small bowel. The development of such a fistula usually occurs as a result of one or more episodes of acute cholecystitis (inflammation of the gallbladder) with ulceration of its wall.

Once in the bowel, the stone usually travels distally, in some cases mixed with stool in which it is evacuated without consequence. In others, it becomes stuck within the lumen (most often in the distal ileum) and causes bowel obstruction, a serious complication that may require emergency surgery.

The condition was first described by the Danish physician Thomas Bartholin in 1654. A characteristic radiographic appearance was described by Dr. Leo Rigler (Rigler’s triad) in 1941:

- evidence of small bowel obstruction (such as dilated bowel loops);

- a gallstone not in the area of the normal gallbladder;

- air in the bile ducts

Below: An abdominal radiograph showing Rigler’s triad: air in the bile ducts (red arrow), dilated small bowel loops (blue arrow), and a calcified mass (gallstone) in the lower abdomen (yellow arrow).

Source: Gaillard, F. (2009). Gallstone ileus. Radiopaedia.

X-ray

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