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Pathogenesis

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Pigment stones are associated with excess production of bilirubin for example in:

  • chronic haemolysis - for example, hereditary spherocytosis, sickle cell anaemia, thalassaemia, malaria, leukaemia
  • hepatic cirrhosis - especially in the Far East where viral hepatitis is common
  • bile stasis - for example, a strictured or a markedly dilated common duct
  • bacterial infection - 90% of pigment stones comprise dense mixtures of bacteria and bacterial glycocalix along with pigment solids. It is likely that bacterial á-glucoronidase is responsible for deconjugating soluble bilirubin diglucoronide to unconjugated bilirubin, which subsequently becomes agglomerated by glycocalix into macroscopic stones.

Particularly in Asia, pigment stones are associated with infestations:

  • Clonorchis sinensis
  • Fasciola hepatica
  • Ascaris lumbricoides

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