Sonography:
Sonographically, choledocholithiasis can be visualized by abdominal ultrasonography with a sensitivity between 50 - 100 %, as it strongly depends on the examiner and the size of the concrements (Beyer 2021).
Dilatation of the choledochal duct is an important sonographic criterion with a specificity of 96% (Gutt 2018). However, at an early stage, the dilatation id R. not yet presentable (Kasper 2015)
EUS:
Endosonography has the highest specificity of 95% in a prospective controlled study (Gutt 2018).
ERCP:
According to Kasper (2015), the most important diagnosis, the so-called gold standard, in cases of V. a. a choledocholithiasis is ERCP with a sensitivity and specificity of clearly > 90 % (Gutt 2018). At the same time, ERCP allows for immediate therapy in cases of choledocholithiasis (Kasper 2015).
However, as ERCP has a morbidity rate of 10% and a mortality rate of 1%, it should not be performed for purely diagnostic purposes (Lehmann 2022).
Therefore, if the findings are unclear, MRCP plus EUS is recommended first (Lehmann 2022). This can be used to diagnose choledocholithiasis in > 90% (Kasper 2015).
MRCP:
The specificity of MRCP alone is 73% (Gutt 2018).
Cholangiography:
This can be performed endoscopically, percutaneously, or intraoperatively (Kasper 2015). However, iv cholangiography has now lost much of its importance due to modern CT and MRI diagnostics (Lehmann 2022).