1. Gallbladder stones, to open or not to open? In principle, surgery is recommended for patients with symptoms of right upper abdominal pain and discomfort, especially for patients with recurrent attacks. 2. When is it more appropriate to operate? In general, it is recommended to operate when there is no pain, and for acute attacks, it is more appropriate to operate 1-2 months after the inflammation is controlled, because at that time, the gallbladder is not inflamed and edematous, and the operation is simple, with quick recovery and few complications. If conservative treatment is ineffective, emergency surgery is required, but the risk is much greater. 3. Minimally invasive, or open? I just want to say that one is a fine operation under high-definition magnified view, and the other is a deep small incision to pull out by hand. There is no doubt that laparoscopic cholecystectomy has been the international gold standard for decades. Of course, those who have difficulty operating laparoscopically still need open surgery as a supplement, and the incision must not be small at that time. Trust the doctor, not the lady in the next village. 4. How to do gallbladder removal surgery? Can minimally invasive surgery be clean? The procedure of cholecystectomy is exactly the same as open surgery. The difference lies in the small puncture opening in the abdominal wall of minimally invasive surgery, we will put the gallbladder in a retrieval bag and take it out. 5. Can I have my gallbladder preserved? How is biliary lithotripsy done? Ultrasound or MRI and other imaging examinations clearly single or few stones, intraoperative choledochoscopy or cholecystoscopy must be clear that there are no residual stones or sediment, otherwise, stone recurrence is the biggest pain after biliary preservation surgery. 6. What is the difference between bile duct stones and gallbladder stones? Some bile duct stones are gallbladder stones that fall into the bile duct through the gallbladder duct, called secondary bile duct stones, while primary bile duct stones have a higher recurrence rate. Bile duct stones may cause bile duct obstruction and affect liver function, etc. In principle, surgery is recommended. 7. Why do I need to put drainage tube for bile duct stone surgery? Because the bile duct is the only way for the bile secreted by the liver to enter the intestine, so bile duct stones cannot be simply removed like gallbladder stones. When the bile duct is incised to remove the stone and then sutured, the healing process may cause biliary stricture because of the constriction of the incision, so we routinely leave a T-tube in the bile duct to prevent stricture and bile leakage. At present, the T-tube is usually left in place for 2-3 months, and it can be removed only after there is no stricture or stone remaining on the imaging. 8. What is ERCP? There is an alternative treatment for common bile duct stones. The opening of the bile duct into the intestine is found via gastroduodenoscopy, and a retrograde tube is inserted to remove the stones from the bile duct. This is a better minimally invasive treatment because there is no need to incise the common bile duct and no drainage is left in place. We recommend that patients with gallbladder stones combined with bile duct stones can be treated in two steps, with ERCP first to remove the bile duct stones and then laparoscopic cholecystectomy to achieve the least trauma and fastest recovery. However, the relative cost is higher and ERCP does not guarantee 100% success. 9. What will be the impact of gallbladder removal on my life? The physiological function of gallbladder is to concentrate and store bile, so a low-fat diet is needed for a short period of time after gallbladder removal, and generally the bile ducts will be compensated to expand to play the role of part of the gallbladder after 2-3 months. Therefore, it is normal to find mild dilatation of bile ducts after cholecystectomy and there is no need to worry.