During ERCP, healthcare providers use an endoscope and X-rays to observe injectable dye traveling through your pancreatic and bile ducts. ERCP helps providers identify and diagnose conditions related to your ducts, like gallstones, tumors and strictures. Through the endoscope, they can also treat them during the procedure.

What is an ERCP (endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography)?

If your healthcare provider suspects you might have a problem in your biliary system, they might order an ERCP test to look for it. ERCP stands for endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. It’s a type of imaging test that allows healthcare providers to look inside your bile ducts and pancreatic ducts.

The long name spells out the different types of technology involved in the process. “Endoscopic” refers to endoscopy, which means passing a tiny camera on a tube down your throat and into your small intestine (while you’re under sedation). They pass a smaller tube through the endoscope to reach your bile ducts.

Through this smaller tube, they inject a contrast dye backward into your bile ducts and pancreatic duct. This is what the “retrograde” refers to. “Cholangiopancreatography” refers to the photographs they take. “Cholangio” is “related to the bile ducts,” and “pancreato” is “related to the pancreas.”

Contrast dye helps the insides of your tiny bile ducts and pancreatic ducts show up better in X-rays. This allows healthcare providers to see possible blockages in your ducts — like gallstones, tumors or scar tissue causing narrowing of your ducts. Through the endoscope, providers can also treat these issues on sight.

Why would I need an ERCP?

Your provider might suggest an ERCP if you have symptoms that suggest a problem in your biliary system, such as:

  • Unexplained upper abdominal pain or biliary colic.
  • Signs of stalled bile flow or bile leakage, like jaundice.

The ERCP procedure can help diagnose and treat common issues affecting your biliary ducts, such as:

  • Inflammation (cholangitis) and possible infection.
  • Narrowing caused by scar tissue (biliary stricture).
  • Gallstones in your common bile duct.
  • Gallstone pancreatitis.
  • Tumors or cancer in your bile ducts.
  • Bile duct leaks or other injuries.

How does ERCP work?

ERCP combines endoscopy with fluoroscopy, a type of moving X-ray. Fluoroscopy can help show how well fluids are flowing through your biliary ducts. If fluids are leaking, or if they’re stalling and backing up in your biliary system, your provider will be able to see this and look for the source of the issue.

The endoscope allows your technician (endoscopist) to physically access the site. This is how they inject the contrast dye that helps make fluoroscopy work. It also allows them to treat issues when they find them. Endoscopists can use long, narrow tools to perform minor procedures through an endoscope.

Who performs an ERCP?

A gastroenterologist typically performs an ERCP. Gastroenterologists are specialists in conditions related to your digestive system, which includes your biliary system. They’re also specialists in performing endoscopies. They train to perform endoscopic procedures that can substitute for minor surgeries.

How should I prepare for my ERCP test?

Your healthcare provider will give you personalized instructions to follow before your procedure. In general, they’ll ask that you:

  • Don’t smoke, eat, chew gum or drink anything but water for eight hours before the test.
  • Discuss your current medical conditions and medications with your provider in advance. They might ask you to discontinue certain medications before the test, such as blood thinners.
  • Discuss any prior reactions or allergies to the contrast dye they use in the test, or the anesthesia.
  • Arrange for a ride home after the test. The anesthesia will take 24 hours to wear off.

What happens during the ERCP procedure?

ERCP is an outpatient procedure, which means you go home the same day. The procedure can take one to two hours. You’ll receive anesthesia through an IV to sedate you. You may or may not be awake, but either way, you probably won’t remember any of it. You’ll need someone to drive you home afterward.

During the diagnostic portion of the ERCP procedure, your provider will:

  • Numb your throat with a liquid anesthetic to reduce discomfort, if you wish.
  • Insert the endoscope through your mouth and guide it carefully down your esophagus and stomach to the top of your small intestine (duodenum). It projects images onto a screen.
  • Using the video, locate the opening to the bile and pancreatic ducts inside your duodenum.
  • Slide a smaller tube through the endoscope catheter until it reaches this opening, then slide it inside. Inject contrast dye through this smaller catheter into the ducts.
  • Use fluoroscopy to take real-time video X-rays as the dye travels through the ducts. Fluoroscopy works through brief bursts or pulses of X-ray beams. It’s considered a safe amount of radiation.
  • Check these images for problems affecting your ducts, like obstructions, swelling or leaks.

If your provider finds an issue during the procedure, they’ll do what they can to fix it through the endoscope, using tiny instruments. Your endoscopist may:

  • Break up and remove gallstones.
  • Remove tumors or tissue samples for biopsy.
  • Dilate or stretch narrowed ducts to widen them.
  • Place a stent inside a duct to keep it propped open.
  • Repair a leak or injury in your ducts.
  • Make a small cut into the muscle surrounding the opening to the ducts and open it up. This is called a sphincterotomy.

What should I expect after the ERCP procedure?

After the procedure, you’ll remain at the medical center for an hour or two while the anesthesia wears off. Then your driver can take you home. You’ll be a little groggy or spacey for the rest of the day. You may have some mild discomfort for a day or two after the procedure. Symptoms might include:

  • Sore throat and difficulty swallowing. The endoscope might have irritated your throat. It might help to stick to soft foods or liquids until it feels normal again.
  • Bloated stomach or gas pain. The endoscope blows gas into your GI (gastrointestinal) tract to inflate it for better viewing. You might feel this briefly (until it passes).
  • Nausea. This is a potential side effect of anesthesia, which will wear off over the next day.

What are the potential risks or complications of ERCP?

Complications occur in approximately 5% to 10% of ERCP procedures. The risks depend partly on your preexisting conditions and what type of therapeutic procedure you have during ERCP. Your gastroenterologist will discuss the potential risks with you in advance. Possible complications include:

  • Adverse reaction to the sedative. This can cause cardiopulmonary complications in people with preexisting lung or heart disease.
  • Allergic reaction to the contrast dye. If this happens, your doctor will quickly administer medication to stop the reaction.
  • Injury to your GI tract from the endoscope. This could cause internal bleeding or, in severe cases, a hole.
  • Injury to your bile ducts from the endoscopic instruments, causing a bile leak.
  • Infection in your biliary system. Your healthcare provider may give you antibiotics in advance to prevent this.
  • Irritation and inflammation of the pancreas due to the procedure.

If you’re pregnant during the procedure, there’s a low risk of harm to the fetus from the radiation during fluoroscopy. Your doctor will ask you in advance if there’s any chance you’re pregnant. If so, they’ll attempt to reschedule the procedure or minimize your radiation exposure, if necessary.

When should I know the results of the test?

Your endoscopist should be able to discuss your ERCP procedure with you immediately afterward unless you still feel groggy from the anesthesia. They’ll tell you what they found and what they were able to do to fix it. If they took a tissue sample for biopsy, those results might take a few weeks to come back.

If your ERCP didn’t find anything, you might need a different type of test next. If the procedure wasn’t successful in fixing your issue, or if your biopsy results reveal a new problem, you might need to follow up with a different type of procedure. Your healthcare provider will discuss the next steps with you.

When should I call my healthcare provider?

Contact your provider if you experience severe or unusual symptoms after ERCP, such as:

  • Severe abdominal pain or swelling.
  • Chest pain or difficulty breathing.
  • Fever, vomiting or other signs of infection.
  • Rectal bleeding or black, tarry stools.
  • American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy. Understanding ERCP (https://www.asge.org/home/for-patients/patient-information/understanding-ercp). Accessed 11/1/2023.
  • American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy. Understanding Therapeutic ERCP (https://www.asge.org/home/for-patients/patient-information/understanding-therapeutic-ercp(1)). Accessed 11/1/2023.
  • National Library of Medicine (U.S.) ERCP (https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/007479.htm). Accessed 11/1/2023.
  • Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons. Patient Information for ERCP (Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography) (https://www.sages.org/publications/patient-information/patient-information-for-ercp-endoscopic-retrograde-cholangio-pancreatography-from-sages/). Accessed 11/1/2023.
  • National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (U.S.). Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) (https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/diagnostic-tests/endoscopic-retrograde-cholangiopancreatography). Accessed 11/1/2023.
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