Biliary Anatomy & Access - Gut's Golden Pipes
- Intrahepatic Ducts: Right & Left hepatic ducts converge to form Common Hepatic Duct (CHD).
- Extrahepatic Ducts:
- Gallbladder → Cystic Duct.
- Cystic Duct + CHD → Common Bile Duct (CBD).
- CBD + Pancreatic Duct → Ampulla of Vater → Duodenum.
- Percutaneous Access:
- Right-sided: Mid-axillary line, transhepatic, commonest.
- Left-sided: Subxiphoid, for isolated left ductal system.

⭐ The most common percutaneous biliary access is via a right mid-axillary transhepatic approach, targeting a peripheral right hepatic duct (segments 6 or 7).
Indications & Contraindications - Green Light, Red Light
⭐ PTBD is often preferred for high biliary obstructions (e.g., Klatskin tumors), while ERCP is typically first-line for distal obstructions.
Biliary Procedures - The IR Plumber's Toolkit
-
Percutaneous Transhepatic Biliary Drainage (PTBD): Decompresses obstructed biliary system.
- Access: Typically Rt. mid-axillary, US/fluoroscopy guided.
- Drainage Types: Internal-external (across stricture) or purely external.
- Key Uses: Malignant/benign obstructive jaundice, acute cholangitis, pre-operative decompression.
-
Biliary Stenting: Maintains biliary duct patency post-dilatation or for palliation.
- Plastic Stents: Temporary, smaller diameter; for benign strictures, require frequent exchanges.
- Self-Expanding Metallic Stents (SEMS): Larger diameter, longer patency; for malignant obstructions.
- Covered SEMS: Prevent tumour ingrowth, potentially removable; higher migration risk.
- Uncovered SEMS: Embed into wall, less migration; risk of tumour ingrowth/epithelial hyperplasia causing occlusion.
-
Percutaneous Cholecystostomy (PC): Drains gallbladder in high-risk patients.
- Main Indication: Acute cholecystitis when surgery is contraindicated.
- Technique: US-guided transhepatic or transperitoneal catheter placement.
-
Other Interventions:
- Biliary Dilatation: Balloon catheters for benign/malignant strictures.
- Stone Extraction: Using baskets (e.g., Dormia) or balloons, often via T-tube tract or PTBD access.

⭐ In malignant biliary obstruction, SEMS (Self-Expanding Metallic Stents) offer superior long-term patency compared to plastic stents.
Complications & Management - Navigating Rough Waters
- Hemorrhage:
- Arterial: Angioembolization.
- Venous: Pressure, often self-limiting.
- Sepsis/Cholangitis:
- IV antibiotics.
- Ensure/optimize biliary drainage.
⭐ Acute cholangitis (Charcot's triad: fever, jaundice, RUQ pain) is a critical risk; manage with IV antibiotics & urgent biliary drainage.
- Bile Leak/Biloma:
- Percutaneous drainage of collection.
- Consider stent adjustment/new placement.
- Pancreatitis:
- Usually mild; supportive care (NPO, analgesia).
- Pneumothorax (supracostal access):
- Observe if small; chest tube if symptomatic/large.
- Catheter Issues (Dislodgement/Occlusion):
- Fluoroscopic repositioning.
- Flush; if fails, exchange catheter.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- PTBD is vital for biliary obstruction if ERCP fails or is contraindicated.
- Right-sided PTBD access is standard, targeting peripheral ducts to minimize risks.
- Key PTBD complications: hemobilia, sepsis, bile leak, pneumothorax.
- Metallic stents offer superior long-term patency over plastic stents in malignant strictures.
- Percutaneous cholecystostomy drains acute cholecystitis in surgically high-risk patients.
- Rendezvous technique combines percutaneous and endoscopic routes for challenging biliary access.
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