Alagille syndrome is an inherited condition in which bile builds up in the liver because there are too few bile ducts to drain the bile. This results in liver damage.
Your liver makes bile to help remove waste from your body. Bile also helps digest fats and the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K. The body can use these vitamins only if they are combined with fat from the foods you eat. Bile travels in bile ducts out of the liver. If you don't have enough of these ducts, bile backs up in your liver. It damages your liver tissues, and ultimately can cause your liver to fail. As treatment choices increase, people with this condition live longer, more comfortable lives, especially if the condition is discovered early. About 3 in 4 people diagnosed with the syndrome in childhood live to at least age 20.