Find clinic locations for Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics and services in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
Find services offered by Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
We encourage you, our patient, concerned family member, or area employer to review Fort HealthCare’s information
We coordinate community education and health-related events and screenings for the Fort HealthCare service area.
The biliary system consists of the organs and ducts that help to make and transport bile. These include the bile ducts, gallbladder, and related structures.
The transportation of bile follows this sequence:
When the liver cells secrete bile, it is collected by a system of ducts that flow from the liver through the right and left hepatic ducts.
These ducts ultimately drain into the common hepatic duct.
The common hepatic duct then joins with the cystic duct from the gallbladder to form the common bile duct. This runs from the liver to the first section of the small intestine (the duodenum).
But not all bile runs directly into the duodenum. About half of the bile produced by the liver is first stored in the gallbladder. This is a pear-shaped organ located directly below the liver.
Then, when food is eaten, the gallbladder contracts and releases stored bile into the duodenum to help break down the fats.
The biliary system's main function includes the following:
To drain waste products from the liver into the duodenum
To help in digestion with the controlled release of bile
Bile is the greenish-yellow fluid (made of waste products, cholesterol, and bile salts) that is secreted by the liver cells to do these two main functions:
Carry away waste
Break down fats during digestion
Bile salt is the actual component that helps break down and absorb fats. Bile, which is excreted from the body in the form of stool (feces), is what gives stool its dark brown color.