What does it feel like to have pain in your shoulder blade from gallstones

Gallstone shoulder blade pain is a radiating pain with an irregular location. When gallstones occur, due to inflammation stimulation of the phrenic nerve, the impulse of nerve endings affects the sensory nerve fibers of the skin of the shoulder, which leads to false signals from the cerebral cortex that it is a disease of the right shoulder. When inflammation violates the nerves of the abdominal wall, the branches of the ninth intercostal nerve on the right side are distributed in the area of the gallbladder, and pain in the right upper abdomen occurs when the gallbladder is stimulated by inflammation, which can be reflected to the posterior branch of the same nerve, resulting in pain in the subscapular angle. The typical pain in patients with gallbladder stones is gallbladder colic in the right upper abdomen, radiating to the right scapula and back, but there is only a radiating pain in the skin and no deep nerve impulses. When gallbladder stones are found to be associated with pain, it is advisable to consult the hepatobiliary surgery department of the regular hospital.