HIDA scan
Normal
scan After fatty meal
- A HIDA scan is an imaging test used to examine
the gallbladder and the ducts leading into and out of the gallbladder.
- How it is done
- The patient receives an intravenous
injection of a radioactive material called hydroxy iminodiacetic acid (HIDA).
- The HIDA material is taken up by the liver
and excreted into the biliary tract.
- In a healthy person, HIDA will pass
through the bile ducts and into the cystic duct to enter the
gallbladder.
- It will also pass into the common bile
duct and enter the small intestine, from which it eventually makes its
way out of the body in the stool.
- HIDA imaging is done by a nuclear scanner,
which takes pictures of the patient's biliary tract over the course of
about two hours.
- The images are then examined by a
radiologist, who interprets the results.
- Safety
- It is generally a very safe test and is
well tolerated by most patients.
- Indication
- Usually, HIDA scans are ordered for
patients who are suspected of having an obstruction in the biliary
tract, most commonly those who are thought to have a stone blocking the
cystic duct leading out of the gallbladder.
- Such a scenario is consistent with acute
cholecystitis, which often requires surgical removal of the gallbladder.
- In cholecystitis, HIDA will appear in the
bile ducts, but it will not enter the cystic duct or the gallbladder --
a finding that indicates obstruction.
- If the HIDA enters the bile ducts but does
not enter the small intestine, then an obstruction of the bile duct
(usually due to stones or cancer) is suspected.
- Cost