Surgery
Surgery to remove the gallbladder
(cholecystectomy) is the treatment of choice for
gallstones that cause moderate to severe pain or other
symptoms. Symptoms usually do not return after the gallbladder has been
removed. In a small number of cases, surgery may be done to prevent
complications
of gallstones.
Laparoscopic surgery
is often the best
method to remove the gallbladder. Open gallbladder surgery requires a longer
recovery period and causes more pain.7, 8
See more information about when surgery is
needed for:
Should I have surgery to treat gallstone
attacks?
Surgery Choices
Laparoscopic gallbladder surgery is
the most common surgery done to remove the gallbladder. In this type of
surgery, a doctor inserts a lighted viewing instrument called a laparoscope and
surgical tools into your abdomen through several small cuts (incisions). This
type of surgery is very safe, and people who have it usually recover enough in
a few days to go back to work or to their normal routines.
Open
gallbladder surgery involves one larger incision through which the
gallbladder is removed. It may be done if laparoscopic surgery is not an option
or when complications are found during laparoscopic surgery. Most open
surgeries occur after trying to do a laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Open surgery
also may be the best choice if the blood won't clot well, the anatomy is not
normal, or there is too much scarring from previous surgery.
About
15% of people who have symptoms from gallstones also have gallstones in the
common bile duct.1 Common
bile duct stones (choledocholithiasis) can cause life-threatening
complications, so they may need to be removed if they are discovered during
surgery to remove your gallbladder.
What To Think About
Recovery is much faster and
less painful after laparoscopic surgery than after traditional open
surgery.
- The hospital stay after laparoscopic surgery
is shorter than after open surgery. People generally go home the same day or
within 1 day compared with 2 to 4 days for open surgery.
- Recovery
is faster after laparoscopic surgery.
- You will spend less time away
from work and other activities after laparoscopic surgery (about a week to 10
days compared with 4 to 6 weeks for open surgery).