Ultrasonography of the biliary tract

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Author: Mikael Häggström [notes 1]

Ultrasonography of the biliary tract encompasses the gallbladder as well as the intra- and extrahepatic bile ducts.

Basic screening

The biliary tract is sometimes best evaluated in the intercostal space (between the ribs), and sometimes in the upper right abdominal quadrant during inspiration (possibly with the patient turned to the right for gallbladder visualization). Thus, if one of the methods does not clearly rule out pathology, the other one should be done as well.

Borderline of a dilated perihilar bile duct (see Ultrasonography of gallstones for detailed ranges).
  • Measure the width of the bile ducts, which is usually easiest for the perihilar bile duct (which is the region where the common hepatic duct becomes the common bile duct, at the hilum of the liver). A normal width of the perihilar bile duct can be reported as for the extrahepatic bile ducts, since it also excludes a more distal common bile duct obstruction. The common bile duct is normally up to 8 mm.[1] If dilated, see Ultrasonography of dilated bile ducts.
Also take a look at intrahepatic bile ducts to rule out obvious dilation.

It is usually preferable to also perform a general upper abdominal screening.

Report

Example in a normal case:
Gallbladder with thin wall and no gallstones. Normal width of the intra-and extrahepatic bile ducts.

See also: General notes on reporting

Presentations

Diseases

Notes

  1. For a full list of contributors, see article history. Creators of images are attributed at the image description pages, seen by clicking on the images. See Radlines:Authorship for details.

References

  1. Hoeffel, Christine; Azizi, Louisa; Lewin, Maité; Laurent, Valérie; Aubé, Christophe; Arrivé, Lionel; Tubiana, Jean-Michel (2006). "Normal and Pathologic Features of the Postoperative Biliary Tract at 3D MR Cholangiopancreatography and MR Imaging ". RadioGraphics 26 (6): 1603–1620. doi:10.1148/rg.266055730. ISSN 0271-5333.