Dietary considerations for calculous cholecystitis

  The dietary considerations for stone cholecystitis are as follows: 1, cholecystitis in the acute phase, avoid eating fried, fried food, eggs, broth and alcohol; diet should be limited to low-fat, low protein, a small amount of easily digestible liquid or semi-liquid food, as the disease subsides can gradually add a small amount of fat and protein foods, such as lean meat, fish, eggs, milk and fruits and fresh vegetables.  2, patients with chronic cholecystitis, eating on weekdays should be based on light, easy-to-digest food, should enter a large number of drinks (1500-2000ml) to dilute bile. Eat once every 2-3 hours to stimulate bile secretion. Eat easily digestible protein, 50g per day. do not eat animal brain, kidney, egg yolk, fried food, spicy products.  3, cholecystitis, gallstone patients, in terms of dietary rules, it is appropriate to eat regularly and quantitatively, eat less and more meals, should not be too full. In the dietary structure, strictly control fat and cholesterol-containing foods, such as fatty meat, fried food, animal offal, etc., because the formation of gallstones is related to high cholesterol and metabolic disorders in the body. Do not drink alcohol and eat spicy food, it is advisable to eat more radish, green vegetables, beans, soy milk and other side dishes. Radish has a biliary effect and can help digestion and absorption of fat; green vegetables contain a lot of vitamins and fiber; beans are rich in vegetable protein. In addition, some fruits and juices should be supplemented to compensate for the loss of fluid and vitamins caused by inflammation.  4, cholecystitis, gallstone patients It is generally advisable to enter a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet. Fatty meats, fried foods, dried fruits, nuts and egg yolks that contain a lot of fat, animal brains, liver, kidneys and fish roe should be strictly controlled. The diet should be easy to digest and less dregs to avoid gas. All alcohol, stimulating foods, strong condiments can promote gallbladder contraction, so that the biliary sphincter can not be relaxed in time, resulting in bile outflow, thus causing an acute attack of cholecystitis, so they should be avoided. In acute attacks, low-fat, easily digestible semi-liquid or liquid food is recommended; in severe cases, fasting, gastrointestinal decompression and intravenous rehydration should be given.