Visualization of the Biliary Tree
Oral cholecystography (OCG), the time-honored method for imaging the gallbladder, involves the oral administration of an iodinated compound, which is concentrated in the gallbladder, followed 12 hours later by a radiograph of the gallbladder. The technique identifies most gallstones in patients with a functioning gallbladder. However, in many patients with chronic cholecystitis, and in all patients with a serum bilirubin greater than 2 mg/dl, the gallbladder will not opacify. US is more sensitive (> 98 per cent verus 90 per cent) in detecting gallstones and is replacing the OCG in many centers.
Bile ducts and disorders involving them are well seen only when contrast material is used to fill them. Contrast may be injected into the biliary tree from the upstream side via a thin (23-gauge) needle introduced percutaneously into the hepatic parenchyma (percutaneous transhepatic cholangiogram, PTC) or from below via a small catheter placed endoscopically into the papilla of Vater (endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, ERCP, see page 289). Table 37-3 compares these two procedures, both of which provide an excellent view of the biliary tree, although PTC is generally preferred for intrahepatic bile duct lesions and ERCP for extrahepatic duct lesions.
- CARCINOMA OF THE PANCREAS - Definition
- Incidence
- Improving Case Management
- CONSTRICTIVE PERICARDITIS
- RADIOGRAPHIC AND ENDOSCOPIC PROCEDURES IN GASTROENTEROLOGY
- MYOCARDIAL METABOLISM
- Urolithiasis
- CLINICAL PRESENTATION
- ORIGIN OF ABDOMINAL PAIN
- Pathogenic Mechanisms
- APPROACH TO THE DIAGNOSIS OF JAUNDICE
- PROSTHETIC VALVES
- Outcome and Prognosis
- V-GASTROINTESTINAL DISEASE
- Hepatic Diseases
- Chromic Renal Failure Due to Drugs
- Renal Biopsy
- HEART DISEASE AND PREGNANCY
- COMPLICATIONS OF MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION AND THEIR MANAGEMENT
- Alterations in Glomerular Hemodynamics, Parathyroid Hormone Metabolism, and Systemic Arterial Blood Pressure
- Bleeding Diatheses
- Conjugated Hyperbilirubinemia
- Miscellaneous
- Blood Chemistries
- SYNCOPE
- Vitamin Dresistant Rickets
- Differential Diagnosis and Evaluation of the Patient
- CLINICAL PRESENTATION
- HEART BLOCK
- THE ZOLLINGER-ELLISON SYNDROME
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
- Hematopoietic System
- Proteinuria
- CLINICAL CLASSIFICATION OF JAUNDICE
- GLOMERULAR DISEASE