Gallbladder stones can be discharged partly if the patient takes herbal medicine to remove the stones. For some of the small stones, they may be discharged from the gallbladder into the common bile duct, but if the small stones in the common bile duct can be discharged into the intestines, this kind of disease can be cured, but if the stones are large and are not discharged into the intestines, there is a possibility of formation of common bile duct stones, and with the siltation of bile and changes in the rheology of the bile, the stones may be further formed into common bile duct stones, which will lead to the possibility of obstructive jaundice. In such cases, if choledocholithiasis develops, ERCP for stone extraction should be considered, and nasobiliary drainage should be placed after stone extraction. Therefore, in patients with gallbladder stones, if the stones are large, it is not recommended to consider oral herbal preparations, and laparoscopic cholecystectomy should be actively considered, which is generally easier and less costly to treat. If you wait for the stones to be discharged into the common bile duct for further treatment, it is possible that the treatment will be more troublesome and costly.