Relief of common bile duct obstruction during the course of hepatobiliary scintigraphy.
Hepatobiliary scintigraphy performed in a patient suspected of having common bile duct obstruction showed persistence of the hepatic parenchymal phase and no bile duct or gallbladder activity during the first hour of imaging. On endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography examination several hours later, an obstructing gallstone was identified in the common bile duct, and the stone was extracted in conjunction with a papillotomy. Delayed scintigraphic images at 6 hours were unchanged from the earlier views, but imaging at 24 hours showed tracer activity in the small bowel and colon along with persistent hepatic parenchymal activity. These results demonstrate that hepatobiliary radiopharmaceuticals remain in an excretable form in the liver in patients with complete common duct obstruction, but that resumption of bile flow and tracer excretion does not occur until a number of hours after relief of the obstruction.