When gallstones form in your gallbladder and obstruct the duct that travels from your pancreas to your small intestines, biliary pancreatitis develops. Gallstones are formed from digestive fluid fragments that have solidified. Pancreatitis is a disorder that often involves pancreatic inflammation. It could be acute or ongoing. When properly treated, acute pancreatitis develops swiftly and often goes away within a few days. Chronic pancreatitis steadily worsens over time as a result of persistent tissue injury. By becoming lodged in the duct that connects your gallbladder to your small intestines via your pancreas, gallstones can result in biliary pancreatitis. As a result of this obstruction, enzymes back up into your pancreas, causing damage and inflammation. Gallstones fewer than 5 millimeters in diameter appear to be associated with an increased risk of developing biliary pancreatitis. These stones may not be large enough to pass through your gallbladder's ducts, but they are tiny enough to do so. Gallstones can occasionally measure more than 5 cm, or roughly 2 inches, in diameter. This is quite uncommon.
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