You may see dramatic claims online like “avoid gallbladder surgery if possible” or “3 diseases will follow after removal.” These statements are often misleading.
The reality is more balanced: gallbladder removal (cholecystectomy) is a common and generally safe procedure, but like any surgery, it can lead to some digestive changes in certain people.
Let’s separate fear from fact.
🧠 First: what the gallbladder actually does
The gallbladder is a small organ under the liver that:
- Stores bile
- Releases bile to help digest fats
Bile is still produced by the liver even without the gallbladder.
After removal, bile flows directly into the intestine in a more continuous, less controlled way.
🩺 Why surgery is usually done
Gallbladder removal is typically recommended for:
- Gallstones causing pain
- Inflammation (cholecystitis)
- Blocked bile ducts
These conditions can become serious if untreated.
⚖️ So what changes after removal?
Most people live normally after surgery, but some experience digestive adjustments.
These are not “diseases that always follow,” but possible post-surgery effects.
💩 1. Digestive changes (especially after fatty meals)
Some people notice:
- Loose stools
- Urgency after eating fatty foods
- Bloating or gas
This happens because bile is no longer stored and released in controlled amounts.
This is often temporary and improves over time as the body adapts.
😣 2. Post-cholecystectomy digestive discomfort
A small number of people develop ongoing digestive symptoms sometimes referred to as post-cholecystectomy syndrome.
Symptoms may include:
- Abdominal discomfort
- Indigestion
- Nausea after meals
This is not a single disease, but a collection of symptoms that can have different causes.
🧬 3. Bile reflux or irritation in some cases