After human body excises gallbladder, what effect will it have?

The influence of cholecystectomy on human body is mainly that the rhythm of bile discharged into intestine changes, and the pressure in biliary tract fluctuates, which may cause biliary abdominal pain, indigestion, abdominal distension, diarrhea and other symptoms. The vast majority of patients undergoing cholecystectomy will not have obvious discomfort symptoms, nor will they affect their life span and increase the possibility of serious diseases. At present, cholecystectomy is the first choice to treat various benign gallbladder diseases, including gallstones, cholecystitis, gallbladder polyps, gallbladder adenomyosis and so on.

If the patient has gallbladder diseases, including recurrent biliary colic, bile duct stones, biliary pancreatitis, gallbladder atrophy, gallbladder filling stones, etc. If you don't have surgery in time, it will be unhealthy. Therefore, it is suggested that patients should undergo cholecystectomy as soon as possible to avoid serious complications and gallbladder cancer. Gallbladder is an organ for storing and concentrating bile. After resection, bile will directly enter the intestine from the bile duct. If patients eat fatty foods, they may have symptoms such as fatty abdominal distension and indigestion, which can be treated with drugs.

Some patients do have some discomfort after cholecystectomy, as I said before. When you take out your gallbladder, some patients do have a certain degree of indigestion. For example, his digestion ability of protein diet and fat diet is slightly lower than before; Secondly, he may often have diarrhea and some related intestinal dysfunction, because at this time he has no organ to store bile, and his bile is discharged into the intestinal cavity at any time, which will lead to repeated diarrhea when the intestinal cavity is stimulated; Others often have a dull pain in the right upper abdomen, which we call post-cholecystectomy syndrome. Although there is no definite disease, the patient may have a dull pain in the right upper abdomen for a period of time after operation.

Gallbladder is an organ for storing and concentrating bile. A large amount of bile secreted by the liver will be concentrated and then enter the gallbladder. When the body needs bile to participate in digestion, gallbladder contraction will discharge concentrated bile into the digestive tract, so a few patients may have digestive tract symptoms in a short time after cholecystectomy.

For example, after eating high-protein or high-fat food, patients may have abdominal distension or diarrhea, but after a period of adaptation and compensation, most patients will not feel any discomfort and will not have any sequelae. Of course, it is not excluded that a very small number of patients will have persistent diarrhea or bloating, but the possibility is very small.

The gallbladder to be removed is generally a diseased gallbladder, and many gallbladder has lost its normal function, so the patients who have removed the gallbladder in this case generally have no side effects, because the body has adapted to the long-term low gallbladder function.