What are the symptoms of gallstones with chronic cholecystitis?

Gallstones with chronic cholecystitis mainly present with vague abdominal pain and distension, along with possible symptoms such as aversion to oil, indigestion, nausea, vomiting, acid reflux and belching. The pain point is usually mainly under the glabellar process, but may also be in the right upper abdomen. Some patients may be mistaken for chronic gastritis and take oral gastric medicine for symptomatic treatment. Patients with chronic cholecystitis should eat as light a diet as possible in their daily lives and not eat foods that are too oily or spicy, because they may induce biliary colic or cause an attack of acute cholecystitis. Once the patient has acute cholecystitis, thickening of the gallbladder wall, edema, or even poor bile drainage inside the gallbladder, fluid accumulation in the gallbladder, and significant enlargement of the gallbladder, the patient’s pain will be very obvious.