First, your child will be given medicine intravenously (through an IV) to help them relax or fall asleep. The doctor will spray a numbing medicine in his mouth to make the test more comfortable.
They will be attached to a heart monitor by wires connected to three stickers on their chest and also have a small lighted sticker on one of their fingers or toes that is connected to an oxygen monitor.
The doctor will guide the endoscope down your child’s esophagus, into the stomach and into the small intestine to the ampulla of Vater, which is the opening of the common bile duct and the pancreatic duct. The common bile duct branches off into many smaller ducts. The doctor will inject a small amount of special contrasting dye into your child’s bile ducts, pancreas, or pancreatic duct. This dye shows up as a blue area on the monitors, which allows the doctor to see stones or other areas of blockage that need to be removed.
Removing a stone
If the doctor sees one or more stones, they will remove them. In order to do this, they may first make a tiny cut in a nearby muscle in order to increase the width by a few millimeters. They will then insert tiny tools (that may look like a balloon or a basket) through the endoscope and use them to “sweep” the duct, pulling out any stones or other debris that may have collected there. Sometimes a stone may be too large to be swept out, so the doctor will break it up, often with a laser or with chemicals.
Dilating and stenting a duct
Whether there is a gallstone or not, the doctor might also see that a duct is too narrow for bile to pass through (stricture). Strictures may be caused by an inflammatory condition, or they may be present at birth.
To treat a stricture, the doctor will pass a tiny balloon through the endoscope into the duct and then inflate the balloon under high pressure. When the balloon inflates, it causes a slight tear in the scar tissue that has built up in the duct and caused it to narrow. Once the balloon has created space in the duct, the doctor will insert a small plastic stent (tube) to keep it open, allowing the tear to heal around this new, wider opening.
For most children, the stent will stay in place for one to three months, and then the child will return to the hospital to have a procedure to remove the stent. Sometimes the doctor might find that the duct didn’t leave enough room when it healed and insert a new stent to keep it open.
Treating pancreatitis
If a child has recurring pancreatitis, scarring can build up in the pancreatic duct that can lead to strictures. Since these strictures can make the pancreatitis worse, the doctor will dilate and stent them.
Treating side effects of chemotherapy
Some chemotherapy treatments for cancer can cause the pancreatic duct to tear and bile can leak into a child’s intestine, making them very sick. The doctor can put a stent across the leak, allowing the duct to heal solidly around it.