Yes you should eat less fat so you don't have digestive trouble like diarrhea.
A gall bladder diet means a diet of low fat food that is easy to process. This way the gall bladder does not have to work that hard to produce bile to help with the digestion of food.
yes
You can most certainly develop pancreatitis after having your gall bladder removed. The gall bladder and pancreas share the same common bile duct and often times agitation to that area can stir up acute chemical pancreatitis.
gall bladder
Fatty Foods. To reduce the enlarging of your gall bladder you can change your diet as well as speak with your doctor about different kinds of medication.
No a horse does not have a Gall Bladder.
He had his gall bladder removed while in office.
The sludge is causing irritation of the gall bladder that is likely leading to the symptoms you have, this is common with stones or sludge, it is not related to making enough bile, which is produced in the liver, not the gall bladder. Therefore if you have the gall bladder removed the source of irritation will be gone, and your symptoms will likely abate
In humans, the gall bladder is not a required organ - it's simply a storage organ for bile for the times that we are not eating and digesting foods. Without a gall bladder, you may have some stomach upset due to the constant slow release of bile into the upper duodenum that may leak back into the stomach. Otherwise, you shouldn't see much of a difference after you heal up from teh surgery.
Acids found in your gall bladder are enzymes
The human digestive system organ is the gall bladder.
Gall stones are usually multiple. In such case you have to get the gall bladder removed by operation. Otherwise the gall stone may enter the common bile duct and may cause obstructive jaundice. That is serious condition.