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Interpreting your symptoms


Sometimes symptoms of a sluggish liver and/or sluggish bile flow can be interpreted incorrectly as gall bladder disease and the solution is to improve liver function. There may be excessive pressure inside the bile ducts within the liver and this occurs before the bile ducts get to the gall bladder. This increased pressure inside the bile ducts can be caused by thick toxic bile or an inflamed liver.

A fatty liver is swollen and congested with fat; this can cause bile flow to be sluggish, resulting in increased pressure and discomfort over the liver.

If the increased pressure remains in the bile ducts this can result in back pressure in the bile ducts; this can cause liver cysts. These cysts are small to begin with, but if nothing is done, these cysts can grow in size and become painful.


Other problems can masquerade as gallbladder problems and the diagnosis may not be made correctly.

Problems that can masquerade as gall bladder problems include:


If a patient presents with symptoms that could be due to gall bladder disease, the doctor will order various tests such as:


It is not uncommon to find gallstones using these various imaging techniques, even in people with no symptoms, and these gall stones may or may not be the cause of the symptoms. However once the gallstones are detected, they are usually blamed for the patient’s symptoms.


Beware – your gallbladder is precious!

You may be talked into having your gallbladder out at the earliest convenience. The surgeon may tell you, “Why not get it removed; it’s not important and it’s making you sick?” Another common thing that doctors will say is “After your gallbladder is removed, you can eat whatever you like without any more pain”

Dr Cabot disagrees with both of these concepts for several reasons –