Normally the gallbladder is located below the liver... However, in 2004, My gallbladder had to be removed from INSIDE my liver... After removal, I was sent home, but went back into the hospital 2 days later for emergency surgery to go back in to close off the bile ducts! My insdie were filled with bile & I was sent home with a catherter & bags to remove the bile... Hospice was there for over a month, everyone thought I was going to die, but I showed them! -- So, yes to answer your question: "It depends how normal you are..."
This never happened before, most probably, in known medical history. But this can happen theoretically. Due to reverse peristaltic contractions. Any such thing is possible in Biology. Normally the stones stay in the gall bladder. At times one comes in the bile duct to give you severe pain and obstructive jaundice in the upper abdomen. The stone can go up to the liver. Not in the liver. As the tract becomes more and more narrow there.
Yes, I just had my gallbladder removed a few weeks ago and had this problem. The surgeon had to cut open my liver in order to remove my gallbladder. He said he had never seen this before.
obviously.
the function of gall bladder is to store bile which is secreted by liver.
but we have only one gall bladder.
No. They may move into the digestive tract.
Yes
The gallbladder is attached to the liver and the bile duct. It is located on the underside of the liver and is connected to the bile duct by a small tube called the cystic duct.
Well, the gallbladder is attached to the liver via the hepatic duct. www.undergradanatomy.com/.../liver/default.asp
Gallbladder
salivary gland, liver, gallbladder, pancreas
Bile is produced by the liver and stored in the gallbladder.
the liver produces bile and the gallbladder stores and releases it for digestion
Yes, a shark has a gall bladder. It is green in colour as the gallbladder stores bile in its lumen. Bile is used to blend fats during digestion. The gall bladder is attached to the liver.
The gallbladder is attached to the bile duct by a small tube called the cystic duct
Accessory organs include the salivary glands, liver, gallbladder, and pancreas and .
The liver to the gallbladder and intestine
duodenum
The liver secretes bile. The gallbladder stores it and sends it to the small intestine.