About me (why this page exists)
- I’ve lost 7 stone (100lbs+) using GLP-1 weight loss injections (Mounjaro) since January 2025.
- I had emergency gallbladder removal surgery (cholecystectomy) in February 2026 (UK/NHS).
- This page is the “everything I wish I’d read” guide: symptoms → A&E → surgery → recovery → diet → GLP-1.
Did Mounjaro (or Wegovy/Ozempic) Cause My Gallstones — and Did GLP-1 Play a Role in My Emergency Gallbladder Removal (UK)?
Short answer: GLP-1 meds can be associated with gallbladder events in some people — but in many cases it’s not one single cause. Gallstones are common in the UK, and rapid weight loss itself can increase the risk of gallstones. The important bit is recognising symptoms early and knowing when it’s not “just trapped wind”.
Start here (my best resources)
Emergency checklist (UK)
Go urgent (A&E / 999) if you have:
- Severe pain that won’t settle (especially upper right abdomen, centre upper abdomen, or radiating to right shoulder/back)
- Fever/chills or you feel seriously unwell
- Jaundice (yellow skin/eyes)
- Dark urine + pale stools (possible bile duct blockage)
- Persistent vomiting / unable to keep fluids down
- Confusion, fainting, chest pain that feels cardiac (do not “wait it out”)
Rough decision guide:
| Situation | What to do (UK) |
|---|---|
| Mild discomfort, settles quickly, no fever/jaundice | Monitor, hydrate, avoid fatty meals, book GP if recurrent |
| Moderate pain lasting > 1–2 hours, recurring episodes | Call NHS 111 for urgent assessment |
| Severe/worsening pain, fever/chills, jaundice, vomiting, dark urine + pale stools | 999 / A&E (possible cholecystitis, bile duct blockage, pancreatitis) |
Gallbladder attack vs trapped wind/heartburn (what fooled me)
I spent years thinking I had trapped wind, reflux, or “one of those random back pains”. The pattern that mattered (and I ignored) was repeating episodes that tended to build, radiate, and mess with sleep.
| Symptom / clue | More like gallbladder | More like wind/heartburn |
|---|---|---|
| Pain location | Upper right / upper centre, radiates to right shoulder/back | Central chest burn, often rising acid sensation |
| Timing | Often after eating (especially fatty), can last hours | Often improves with antacids/burping, changes with posture |
| Repetition pattern | Recurrent “attacks”, gradually more frequent over years | More linked to specific foods/stress, not escalating over years |
| Red flags | Fever, jaundice, dark urine, pale stools, vomiting | Usually none of the above |
If you want the deep-dive version: Gallbladder attack vs trapped wind/heartburn (UK).
My timeline (how it built up)
The slow build: For years I had sporadic episodes that started as an ache in the right shoulder/back area, built into pressure, then either moved across the upper abdomen or settled by morning. Over time the attacks became more frequent.
The trigger week: I’d been losing weight on GLP-1, felt generally better, then I had a small run of richer food (for me: a few cheese toasties across the week). Pain started, didn’t behave like my “usual”, escalated hard overnight, and wouldn’t settle.
The moment that mattered: I eventually called for help and ended up in A&E / surgical assessment. Bloodwork showed inflammation/infection markers, an ultrasound followed, and I was admitted. Surgery happened quickly because it wasn’t “routine gallstones” anymore — it was heading into danger territory.
My blunt lesson:
- ChatGPT can help you ask better questions. It cannot replace proper medical assessment.
- If an “attack” changes pattern (stronger, longer, feverish, yellow, dark urine/pale stools) — treat it as urgent.
- Being “tough” is not a flex when your bile duct or pancreas might be involved.
What happens in hospital (UK): tests, terms, and what they’re checking
| Test / step | Why they do it | What it can suggest |
|---|---|---|
| Vitals + exam | Check stability and pain pattern | Serious infection, dehydration, acute abdomen |
| Bloods (incl. inflammation markers) | Look for infection/inflammation | Cholecystitis, cholangitis, complications |
| LFTs / bilirubin | Check bile flow / liver strain | Blocked bile duct (esp. with jaundice/dark urine) |
| Amylase/lipase | Check pancreas involvement | Pancreatitis risk (urgent) |
| Ultrasound | Fast imaging for stones/inflammation | Gallstones, thickened gallbladder, duct dilation |
| MRCP / CT (sometimes) | More detail if ducts/pancreas suspected | Hidden duct stones, complications |
| ERCP (if duct stone) | Clear bile duct stone | Relieves obstruction and reduces risk |
If you want a plain-English NHS decision tool: NHS England – “Making a decision about gallstones” (PDF).
GLP-1 + gallstones: the honest, boring truth (which is what you want)
1) Gallstones are common in the UK. NHS information notes gallstones affect more than 1 in 10 adults in the UK, and many people have no symptoms.
2) Rapid weight loss can raise gallstone risk. Some NHS hospital diet guidance warns that losing weight too quickly (for example > 1kg/week) can increase gallstone formation risk.
3) GLP-1 meds include gallbladder warnings in product information. For example, official product information for Wegovy (semaglutide 2.4 mg) reports cholelithiasis and cholecystitis in clinical trials; and Mounjaro (tirzepatide) product information notes acute gallbladder disease can occur and is associated with weight reduction.
So did Mounjaro “cause” my gallstones?
In my case, it looks more like long-term predisposition + years of build-up, with weight loss (from any method) making the gallbladder “busier” for a while. GLP-1 may be part of the risk picture for some people, but it’s rarely the one and only cause. If you’ve had previous biliary issues, the safe play is monitoring symptoms early and discussing it with your clinician.
Deep dive: Did Mounjaro cause gallstones? (UK)
Recovery after gallbladder removal: what’s normal vs red flags
Keyhole (laparoscopic) cholecystectomy recovery varies — but there are a few repeat patterns.
| Symptom | Often normal | Get checked urgently |
|---|---|---|
| Shoulder/chest ache | Gas pain from surgery, improves day by day | Breathlessness, crushing chest pain, fainting |
| Bloating / wind | Common early, improves with walking | Hard swollen abdomen + fever + worsening pain |
| Constipation | Often from pain meds, dehydration | No stool/gas + vomiting + severe pain |
| Loose stools/diarrhoea | Can happen after fatty meals early on | Blood, dehydration, persistent fever |
| Dark urine / pale stools | Sometimes dehydration (dark urine only) | Dark urine + pale stools + jaundice |
Helpful reads (based on what people Google post-op):
- Nausea after gallbladder removal (UK)
- Acid reflux after gallbladder removal (UK)
- Chest pain after gallbladder removal (UK)
- Constipation after gallbladder removal (UK)
- Bloating after gallbladder removal (UK)
Diet after gallbladder removal: fat ladder + 7-day meal plan
Without a gallbladder, bile still exists — it’s just not stored and released in one big “squirt” for fatty meals. Early on, the practical trick is smaller portions, lower fat, and a gentle ramp back up.
Fat ladder (reintroduction table)
| Stage | Goal | Foods that usually behave | Foods to delay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stage 1 Days 1–3 |
Settle stomach, avoid “fat shock” | Toast, crackers, oats, rice, bananas, applesauce, soup, low-fat yoghurt | Fried food, cheese overload, creamy sauces, alcohol |
| Stage 2 Days 4–7 |
Gentle protein + fibre | Chicken/turkey, white fish, potatoes, carrots, peas, lentils (small portions), low-fat dairy | Spicy, greasy, large salads (too much raw fibre too soon) |
| Stage 3 Week 2–3 |
Reintroduce moderate fat | Eggs, olive oil (small), nut butter (small), salmon (small portion) | Takeaways, pastries, big cheese meals |
| Stage 4 Week 4+ |
Normalise, learn your triggers | Balanced meals, normal fibre, occasional treats (test slowly) | Your personal “never again” list (everyone has one) |
7-day gentle meal plan (UK-friendly)
Notes: Keep portions modest, eat slower than you think you need to, and aim for a short walk after meals if you can. If you’re on GLP-1, nausea can overlap with post-op digestion — keep it simple.
| Day | Breakfast | Lunch | Dinner | Snack ideas |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Oats + banana | Chicken noodle soup | Rice + white fish + carrots | Low-fat yoghurt, crackers |
| 2 | Toast + honey / jam | Baked potato + tuna (light mayo) | Turkey mince + rice (low-oil) | Apple, rice cakes |
| 3 | Overnight oats | Egg sandwich (thin spread) | Chicken + mash + peas | Low-fat yoghurt |
| 4 | Greek yoghurt (low-fat) + berries | Soup + bread | White fish tacos (no heavy sauces) | Banana, crackers |
| 5 | Scrambled eggs | Chicken salad (small portion, easy veg) | Pasta + tomato sauce + lean protein | Fruit, yoghurt |
| 6 | Oats + peanut butter (tiny amount) | Wrap + turkey + light dressing | Salmon (small) + rice + veg | Rice cakes |
| 7 | Toast + eggs | Baked potato + beans | Curry-style spices (mild) + chicken + rice | Yoghurt, fruit |
Upgrade-order table (if digestion is messy)
| Try this first | Why |
|---|---|
| Smaller meals, lower fat for a bit | Prevents “bile overload” feeling after big fatty meals |
| Walk after meals + hydration | Helps gas, constipation, appetite regulation (especially on GLP-1) |
| Add fibre slowly (oats, bananas, then veg) | Too much fibre too soon can backfire |
| If diarrhoea persists: ask GP about bile acid malabsorption (BAD/BAM) | Some people need targeted treatment rather than “diet hacks” |
Optional support (calm affiliate bridge)
I used Lily & Loaf supplements as part of my wider “get healthier and reduce inflammation” push. This is not a replacement for medical care (and it won’t fix a blocked duct). If you want to browse them, do it with your clinician/pharmacist in mind and avoid miracle thinking:
- Lily & Loaf (affiliate link) (discount code: ALAN10, if active)
Watch (video picks)
Video pick #1: My emergency surgery diary — useful if you want the real timeline, what A&E felt like, and the post-op reality.
Video pick #2: The mega FAQ video — best if you want symptoms, red flags, diet, recovery, and GLP-1 questions answered in one sitting.
Related searches (People Also Search For)
- Gallbladder attack symptoms vs indigestion
- Right shoulder pain after eating: gallbladder?
- Dark urine and pale stools: what does it mean?
- Gallstones and GLP-1 injections (Mounjaro/Wegovy/Ozempic)
- How long does gallbladder pain last?
- How long after gallbladder removal can I eat normally?
- Diarrhoea after gallbladder removal (bile acid malabsorption)
- Can you take GLP-1 without a gallbladder?
FAQs (People Also Ask)
Did Mounjaro cause my gallstones?
Not always. Gallstones are common and can exist silently for years. GLP-1 meds can be associated with gallbladder events in some people, and rapid weight loss can increase risk too. The safest approach is knowing red flags and getting assessed early.
How do I know it’s gallbladder and not trapped wind?
Gallbladder attacks often build, last longer, radiate to the right shoulder/back, and can follow meals. Red flags (fever, jaundice, dark urine + pale stools, persistent vomiting) push it into urgent territory.
What does dark urine + pale stools mean?
It can indicate bile isn’t reaching the gut (possible duct blockage), especially if paired with jaundice or itching. Treat that as urgent.
How long does a gallbladder attack last?
It can be 30 minutes to several hours. If it doesn’t settle, keeps returning, or comes with red flags, don’t wait it out.
Can gallstones cause pancreatitis?
Yes — if a stone blocks the duct that affects the pancreas. Severe upper abdominal pain with vomiting/fever needs urgent assessment.
What tests diagnose gallstones in the UK?
Often blood tests (inflammation markers, LFTs/bilirubin) plus ultrasound. Sometimes CT/MRCP, and ERCP if duct stones are suspected.
What is cholecystitis?
Inflammation/infection of the gallbladder, often due to a blocked duct. It typically needs urgent medical care.
Is gallbladder removal always emergency?
No. Many cases are elective. But if infection/complications are suspected, it can become urgent quickly.
How long is recovery after laparoscopic cholecystectomy?
Many people improve week by week, but digestion can take longer to settle. Follow your surgical team’s advice and reintroduce fats gradually.
Is diarrhoea after gallbladder removal normal?
It can happen, especially after fatty foods. If persistent, ask about bile acid malabsorption (BAD/BAM).
Can I go back on Mounjaro/Wegovy after gallbladder removal?
Some people do, but timing and dose should be discussed with your prescribing clinician, especially after surgery and while appetite/digestion are still settling.
Official sources & stats (UK)
- NHS: Gallstones
- NHS: Acute cholecystitis (includes UK prevalence “more than 1 in 10 adults”)
- NICE CG188: Gallstone disease – diagnosis & management
- NICE Quality Standard: Acute cholecystitis timing
- NHS England decision support tool (PDF)
- Cambridge University Hospitals: Diet advice + rapid weight loss note
- Imperial NHS: Gallstones and diet (PDF)
- EMA: Mounjaro (tirzepatide) product information (PDF)
- EMA: Wegovy (semaglutide) product information (PDF)
- EMA: Ozempic (semaglutide) product information (PDF)
- eMC: Wegovy SmPC (includes gallstone event rates)
- eMC: Mounjaro patient leaflet (PDF)
Internal related reading (UK)
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