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An authentic radiological triad of Rigler allowing the diagnosis of gallstone ileus: A case report.

The Rigler's Triad consists by three radiological signs, including intestinal obstruction, pneumobilia, and an aberrant gallstone in the bowel. It is an inconstant triad considered being pathognomonic of gallstone ileus. Gallstone ileus is an exceptional complication of cholelithiasis due to the passage of one or more gallstones from the bile ducts into the lumen of the bowel through a biliodigestive fistula. We report the case of an 83-year-old female patient with a history of ischemic heart disease and an asymptomatic large gallstone. The patient was admitted to the emergency department for bowel obstruction, abdominal pain, and bilious vomiting. A clinical examination found a patient with an alteration in general condition and a distended abdomen with tenderness. An abdominal CT scan revealed Rigler's triad, allowing the diagnosis of gallstone ileus. A midline exploratory laparotomy was performed to find a giant gallstone blocked in the last ileum loop. A simple enterolithotomy was performed, allowing the extraction of giant lithiasis from an 8-cm major axis. The postoperative evolution was uneventful, and the patient was discharged 4 days after surgical treatment.

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