Hemobilia

Last revised by Daniel J Bell on 8 Dec 2023

Hemobilia refers to the presence of blood in the biliary tree.

The classical Quincke triad, is seen with hemobilia in the context of hepatic arterial aneurysms, and consists of:

  1. melena (i.e. upper gastrointestinal bleeding)

  2. jaundice

  3. abdominal pain

  • iatrogenic: surgical or percutaneous procedures (~67%)

  • trauma (~5%)

  • vascular malformations (7%)

    • e.g. hepatic artery aneurysm or arteriovenous malformation

    • can cause massive hemobilia

  • malignancy (e.g. hepatocellular carcinoma - most common, gallbladder metastases)

  • abscess formation

  • gastrointestinal bleed due to gallstones

Ultrasound is often the first investigation and reveals echogenic material in the bile ducts and dilated gallbladder.

  • high-attenuation clot within the bile ducts

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