Although some controversy exists, diabetic patients generally are thought to have a two- to threefold increased risk of cholesterol gallstones. From previous studies there is no convincing evidence for a supersaturated bile in diabetics, whereas several reports indicate that impaired gall-bladder emptying could be one of the important factors in the increased incidence of gallstones in diabetics. However, studies of gall-bladder motility in diabetics have yielded conflicting results, probably because of substantial heterogeneity in the patients studied, emptying stimulus and technique used to assess gall-bladder motor function. The mechanism of the gall-bladder emptying abnormality in diabetics is not completely understood, although it has been proposed that it could represent a manifestation of denervation caused by visceral neuropathy. Based on normal postprandial cholecystokinin release, it can be ruled out that impaired cholecystokinin release is the mechanism responsible for reduced gall-bladder emptying in diabetics. Other possible explanations for impaired gall-bladder contraction in diabetics include a decreased sensitivity of the smooth muscle of the gall-bladder to plasma cholecystokinin, and/or decreased cholecystokinin receptors on the gall-bladder wall.
CITATION STYLE
Pazzi, P., Scagliarini, R., Gamberini, S., & Pezzoli, A. (2000). Review article: Gall-bladder motor function in diabetes mellitus. In Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Supplement (Vol. 14, pp. 62–65). Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2036.2000.014s2062.x
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