When body cells begin to proliferate out of control, cancer develops. Cancerous cells can develop in almost any portion of the body and subsequently spread to other organs. The liver and small intestine are connected by a network of delicate tubes known as the bile ducts. Their primary function is to let bile, a liquid that aids in the digestion of lipids in diet, pass from the liver and gallbladder into the small intestine. The names of many bile duct system components vary. It starts off in the liver as a variety of microscopic tubes, or ductules. Ducts are the result of the ductules joining together. In a region known as the hilum, the left and right hepatic ducts leave the liver and combine to form the common hepatic duct. A tiny duct known as the cystic duct connects the gallbladder, a tiny organ that stores bile, to the main hepatic duct lower in the body. The common bile duct is the name of this united duct. Before joining the pancreatic duct and emptying into the first portion of the small intestine (the duodenum) at the ampulla of Vater, the common bile duct passes through a portion of the pancreas.
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