Professional Documents
Culture Documents
College of Nursing
Resource Unit
on
CHOLEDOCHOLITHIASIS
Submitted To:
Submitted By:
Group 1 – 3Z
Adolfo, Dally Love
Antor, Ma. Laarni
Barbante, Ginnel
Baronda, Duiza Jane
Batucan, Marlon Jayke
Bayron, Clifford
Borden, Jo Ann
Candia, Jay An
Canete, Dale
Catubag, Charlyn
Cuizon, Karen Mae
Darunday, Avril Daffodil
September 19,2009
General Objectives: After 2 hours of varied lecture discussion we the group1 BSN3-Z students will be able to acquire basic knowledge, beginning skills and positive attitudes
towards the concept of CHOLEDOCHOLITHIASIS.
The biliary system consists of the organs and ducts (bile ducts, gallbladder, and associated structures) that are involved in the production and transportation of bile. The
transportation of bile follows this sequence:
1. When the liver cells secrete bile, it is collected by a system of ducts that flow from the liver through the right and left hepatic ducts.
2. These ducts ultimately drain into the common hepatic duct.
3. The common hepatic duct then joins with the cystic duct from the gallbladder to form the common bile duct, which runs from the liver to the duodenum (the first section of
the small intestine).
4. However, not all bile runs directly into the duodenum. About 50 percent of the bile produced by the liver is first stored in the gallbladder, a pear-shaped organ located
directly below the liver.
5. Then, when food is eaten, the gallbladder contracts and releases stored bile into the duodenum to help break down the fats.
• The liver is located in the upper right-hand portion of the abdominal cavity, beneath the diaphragm, and on top of the stomach, right kidney, and intestines. Shaped like a
cone, the liver is a dark reddish-brown organ that weighs about 3 pounds.
• The cystic duct connects the gallbladder to the common hepatic duct to form the common bile duct.
• The Common bile duct then joins the pancreatic duct, and enters through the hepatopancreatic ampulla at the major duodenal papilla.
• Gallstones (cholesterol stones or pigment stones) form in the gallbladder over many years. They can sometimes travel into the common bile duct, causing a blockage.
If the common bile duct is blocked, this then obstructs the whole of the biliary drainage system as opposed to a blockage further up. Hence there is nowhere for the bile to
go but up and the patient becomes jaundiced since certain waste products (bilirubin) are absorbed back into the blood stream. Furthermore there can be potentially fatal
complications of infection of the biliary tree (cholangitis) and acute pancreatitis.
The liver produces bile which aids in the digestion of fats. The bile travels through tiny canals which eventually drain through the common bile duct into the small intestine. The
gallbladder stores excess bile that is not immediately needed for digestion.