If the bile contains too much cholesterol or bilirubin, or the gallbladder does not empty properly, then stones can form within the gall bladder.
Gallstones can be cholesterol stones, pigment stones or a mixture of the two. Cholesterol stones are largely made of solidified cholesterol. Pigment stones are dark stones made of bilirubin. The majority of stones are mixed stones that contain cholesterol as well as pigment.
The gallbladder can develop just one or two large stones (some can be as large as a golf ball), or lots of tiny stones (as small as grains of sand).
In the UK, 40,000-50,000 operations are performed each year to remove gall bladders
Many people have a “family history” of gallstones but there is no particular gene that has been associated with this.
Gallstones are not related to stones in other parts of the body, particularly stones in the kidneys or in the urinary bladder.
Typhoid Mary
Mary Mallon (18969-1938) was an otherwise healthy woman who carried typhoid (salmonella typhi) bacteria in her gall bladder. She used to work as a cook in New York, and over her career she inadvertently infected at least 53 people (3 of them died). She was forcibly quarantined by the health authorities in her later life.
Erich Muhe, a German surgeon, carried out the first laparoscopic (i.e. keyhole) cholecystectomy in September 1985. He was ahead of his time - when he first reported this operation at a surgical conference people reacted with scepticism and disbelief.
You may see advertisements for remedies to “flush out” gallstones. These treatments are unproven, and have no hard scientific evidence to support their use. It is possible that these remedies have benefited some individuals, but to be labelled effective, a treatment has to be shown to work in a majority of patients, when compared against another “standard” treatment or against a placebo.
When recovering from a gall bladder operation, If doing something hurts your tummy, then stop doing it! Your body is telling you that it is not ready for that yet.
You do not need to modify your diet because your gall bladder has been removed.
These are rare problems, but if and when they do occur, you need to have a detailed discussion with a surgeon or a gastroenterologist. A careful history and examination, and the correct tests, can often help find the underlying cause, which can then be treated.