Virtual Patient Case: Acute Cholecystitis
Online Course Delivery: All courses are delivered through the General Surgery Learning and Resource Centre (LRC). If you do not already have an account associated with this email, we will contact you to set up your LRC account.
CAGS Members: All levels of CAGS membership have complimentary course access for 2023. Please create an account and enter in your code, no purchase necessary. If you do not have a code, email learn@cags-accg.ca.
Non-Members: Purchase access to the course here. Granting access to this eLearning course in the General Surgery Learning and Resource Centre can take up to 2 business days.
Credit Info: 0.5 Learning Hours — 1.5 Section 3 MOC Credits
The topic and knowledge domain associated with this case is the management of acute cholecystitis including technical considerations during surgical management
By the end of this case, you should be able to:
- Describe the principles for management of acute cholecystitis
- List the components of the Critical View of Safety
- Recognize options for dealing with unexpected operative findings
- Describe the procedure and criteria for an intraoperative cholangiogram
Case Authors: Ting Li, MD, MEd, FRCSC
Case Reviewer: Debbie Woo MDCM, FRCSC
Virtual Patient Case Developers: David Fleiszer MDCM, Nancy Posel PhD
Case Audience: General Surgeons, General Surgery Residents and Fellows
This event is an Accredited Self-Assessment Activity (Section 3) as defined by the Maintenance of Certification Program of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, and approved by Canadian Association of General Surgeons.
The user acknowledges that the workshops, handouts, and related course materials contained therein are intended for educational purposes only, and should not be considered to be legal advice or a substitute for legal or clinical consultation. These presentations address issues that are multi-faceted, and the user should not assume that the courses discuss every law, regulation, or ethical code that may be relevant to the subject matter. Legal and ethical standards are subject to change and it is always prudent to check to see whether a particular law, regulation, or ethical standard may have changed.