The symptoms of gallbladder stones are not identical. Some present only with chronic dyspepsia, which can include belching, nausea, nausea and mild distension in the upper abdomen. These symptoms are not specific and many other diseases can have these symptoms. For example, gastric ulcer, gastric cancer, duodenal ulcer, chronic pancreatitis, etc. Other organ diseases in the abdominal cavity can have these symptoms, and even the heart, lungs and pleura outside the abdominal cavity can also show these symptoms. Therefore, when a patient goes to the hospital, the physician neither asks for details of the disease, nor does he do a physical examination, or even prescribes or issues a request for ultrasound examination before the patient has finished speaking, so that a misdiagnosis may occur. This is because gallbladder stones are very easy to detect and identify with ultrasound. If gallbladder stones are present, they may also be caused by other diseases. Once common gallbladder stones are found, physicians do not look deeper and blame it all on gallbladder stones. They are even immediately hospitalized for surgery, and after admission, they do not take a detailed medical history and physical examination, relying on all kinds of special examinations and laboratory tests. Another symptom of gallbladder stones is the sudden onset of acute colic in the upper abdomen or right upper abdomen, with a tendency to paroxysms of severe pain. The abdominal pain may occur suddenly after eating or at night and last from 15 minutes to several hours, starting in the upper abdomen and moving to the back. The pain starts in the upper abdomen and can be transferred to the back. After this colic disappears, there is still upper abdominal distension for 1-2 days. Episodes of colic may recur at intervals of weeks, months or even years, but they do not occur every day. Gallstones in the gallbladder can be expelled into the bile ducts and thereafter into the small intestine to be removed in the stool. The gallbladder can produce stones continuously, while smaller stones are often expelled naturally. If the gallbladder stones are large and their diameter exceeds that of the small bile ducts, they are not easily expelled and become lodged and cause colic. Even if you take various medications with the reputation of stone removal, it does not prove that the stones have been discharged, but they are naturally discharged without medication. The discharge of gallstones is not a good thing, because once the bile ducts are blocked, colic and even fever can occur; blockage of the common bile duct can occur jaundice, or acute gallstone pancreatitis can occur. Small stones in the gallbladder can regenerate even if they are discharged, and the discharge of gallstones does not mean that the disease has been cured. Therefore, it is better to leave the gallbladder stones in the gallbladder than to expel them. Even if cholecystitis occurs as a result, the treatment is much simpler, as the gallbladder can be removed and the patient can be discharged from the hospital in a week or so after surgery. If there are stones in the bile ducts, blocking the flow of bile to the small intestine may cause infection and jaundice, and the bile ducts need to be cut open to remove the blockage, and the hospital stay will be 3-6 weeks. If biliary pancreatitis occurs, the recovery time after hospitalization is even longer, and severe gallstone pancreatitis is a fatal complication. In fact, some so-called lithotripsy drugs and methods do not have definite evidence that smaller gallbladder stones are expelled naturally, and even if they are expelled, they cannot be considered cured. If they are obstructed on the way to expulsion, complications can occur, which can be very dangerous. Therefore, once jaundice occurs in gallstone disease, i.e., yellow color of the skin and eyes, and the patient may have chills and fever, hospitalization is necessary. It should be remembered that if there is no pain, once jaundice and dark yellow urine occur, symptomatic treatment is not advisable and hospitalization is necessary to identify the cause, as it is not necessarily caused by gallstones.