The gallbladder lies under the liver on the right side of the upper abdomen. It is like a pouch which comes off the common bile duct. It is a 'reservoir' which stores bile between meals. The gallbladder contracts (squeezes) when you eat. This empties the stored bile back into the common bile duct. The bile passes along the remainder of the common bile duct into the duodenum. Bile helps to digest food, particularly fatty foods.
The pancreas is a large gland that makes enzymes (chemicals). These flow down the pancreatic ducts, into the main pancreatic duct, and through the papilla into the duodenum. The pancreatic enzymes are vital to digest food. (The pancreas also makes some hormones such as insulin.)
What is an ERCP?
ERCP stands for 'endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography'.
An endoscope is a thin, flexible, telescope. It is passed through the mouth, into the oesophagus and down towards the stomach and duodenum. The endoscope contains fibre optic channels which allows light to shine down so the doctor can see inside.
Cholangio-pancreatography means x-ray pictures of the bile and pancreatic ducts. These ducts do not show up very well on ordinary x-ray pictures. However, if a dye that blocks x-rays is injected into these ducts then x-ray pictures will show up these ducts clearly. Some dye is injected through the papilla back up into the bile and pancreatic ducts (a 'retrograde' injection). This is done via a plastic tube in a side channel of the endoscope. X-ray pictures are then taken.
What happens during an ERCP?
The doctor may numb the back of your throat by spraying on some local anaesthetic, or give you a lozenge to suck. You will usually be given a sedative by an injection into a vein in the back of your hand or arm. The sedative makes you drowsy and relaxed but it does not 'put you to sleep'. It is not a general anaesthetic