Having your impudence bladde removed does not own a serious effect upon your digestiive ability.. WHY?
Answers:
To digest fats, we require that our bodies produce bile and enter it into our digestive tract. Bile is produced in our liver, then concentrated and stored contained by our gallbladder. When we eat a fatty meal, a hormone called Cholecystekinase (CCK) stimulates the gallbladder the release the concentrated bile to emulsify the overweight particles, which allows for digestion.
If you have your gallbladder removed, you still produce and secrete bile (by the liver). The difference is that it is continuous and a weaker concentration. Therefore, if you get through something really really fatty, you might not receive ENOUGH bile to digest all the fat. It will continueagainst through the digestive tract until it increases the water content and you might get diarrhea.
That's why doctors suggest that if you get a cholecystectomy (gallbladder removal) that you put away small, frequent meals. That way you won't bombard your system with more tubby then it can handle.
So, essentially, removing your gallbladder makes excess weight digestion less efficient... but it is still possible.
Because it acts primarily as a place for excess bile to overflow into. Your body still creates the bile without it and will be able to produce enough for everyday function.
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