Patients with gallstones can become pregnant, but it is generally recommended to have the gallbladder removed before pregnancy if you have symptomatic gallbladder stones. Poor activity, poor gastrointestinal motility and elevation of the entire uterus during pregnancy can irritate the gallbladder and induce cholecystitis, which has a much higher chance of occurring in normal people with gallbladder stones than in normal people with gallbladder stones. Therefore, in general, patients with symptomatic gallbladder stones who want to get pregnant should get pregnant after gallbladder removal, and if they are already pregnant with gallbladder stones, the risk is higher first conservative treatment. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy can be done in the presence of recurrent biliary colic, but the surgery is difficult. Studies have shown that failure of conservative treatment is worse than surgery after the development of this problem and that cholecystectomy before six months of pregnancy is safer for both mother and baby. If a patient has gallbladder stones, it is best to have the gallbladder removed before pregnancy, otherwise the chances of gallbladder infection increase during pregnancy.