The Truth About Gallbladder Surgery
10 Myths Doctors Wish You’d Stop Believing
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Buy Now for $20.83
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Narrated by:
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Kristen Saburn
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By:
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Marcus Raithe
About this listen
Every year, millions of people are told they need gallbladder removal surgery — and almost as many are frightened by what they hear next. From whispered warnings about never eating normally again to stories of long recoveries and endless digestive problems, myths about gallbladder surgery have spread far beyond the truth. In The Truth About Gallbladder Surgery: 10 Myths Doctors Wish You’d Stop Believing, medical writer Marcus Raithe unpacks the most common misconceptions with clarity, compassion, and fact-based insight.
This informative and reassuring guide walks readers through the realities of modern gallbladder surgery — what really happens before, during, and after the procedure — and why outdated fears still linger. Drawing on current medical understanding and real patient experiences, it provides the answers people wish they had the moment their doctor first mentions the word “surgery.”
Raithe begins with a simple truth: gallbladder removal, or cholecystectomy, is one of the safest and most routine operations in the world today. Most are performed laparoscopically — using tiny keyhole incisions rather than the large, painful cuts of decades past — and patients are often home within 24 hours. Yet the myths remain, often fueled by old stories, confusing internet forums, and a natural fear of the unknown.
Through ten concise, myth-busting chapters, Raithe explains why these misconceptions persist and replaces them with facts grounded in modern medicine:
- Myth 1: You can’t live a normal life without a gallbladder.
- Myth 2: Gallbladder removal means a large incision and a long recovery.
- Myth 3: You’ll have to follow a bland, restrictive diet forever.
- Myth 4: Surgery will cure all digestive problems.
- Myth 5: You’ll gain weight afterward.