It is important to get a diagnosis right away. Most people with cholangitis feel very sick. They see their doctor or go to the emergency room.
If you have cholangitis, you will likely be in the hospital for a few days. You will be given fluids in your veins. You will also have pain medicine and bacteria-fighting medicine (antibiotics).
You may also need to have the fluid in your bile duct drained and to find the cause of any blockage. In most cases, this is done by a method called ERCP (endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography).
To drain your bile duct using ERCP, a long, thin, flexible tube (endoscope) is put in your mouth. The scope goes down your food pipe (esophagus) and into your stomach. It passes into the first part of your small intestine (the duodenum) and then instruments are inserted into the bile duct. Removing the blockage if possible, and draining the bile internally (in the body) can be done through ERCP most times. The doctor can see the inside of these organs and ducts on a video screen. The video screen is connected to a camera in the scope. Occasionally surgery or interventional radiology are needed to drain the bile duct. If drainage outside the body is needed, a small tube (called a T-tube) may be passed into the ducts to drain fluid. This tube is brought out through the skin. This lets fluid drain out until the infection and inflammation clear up.
You may also have firm tubes (stents) put into the bile ducts to keep them open. Gallstones can also be removed. In most cases, these things can be done using the ERCP scope.
You may need surgery if treatment doesn't work or if you are getting worse. Surgery will open your ducts to drain the bile and fluid that are building up.
If your cholangitis is caused by blocked gallstones, you will likely need to have your gallbladder removed (cholecystectomy) after treatment of the cholangitis.