Gallstones are lumps of solid material that form in your gallbladder. The condition of having gallstones is called cholelithiasis. They are made when the digestive juice called bile turns hard like a stone.
The gallbladder is a small organ under your liver. It stores and concentrates bile made by the liver. Bile aids in the digestion of fats. Bile is made of several things such as cholesterol, bile salts, and a yellowish pigment (bilirubin).
Gallstones can be as small as a grain of sand or as big as a golf ball. Your gallbladder may form a single large stone, hundreds of tiny stones, or both sizes at the same time. Gallstones often don't cause any symptoms. But in some cases, gallstones block the tubes that carry bile (bile ducts). This can lead to a life-threatening infection of the bile ducts, pancreas, or liver. After you have had gallstones, you are at risk of having more.
There are two types of gallstones: cholesterol and pigment.
Cholesterol stones
These stones are:
- The most common type of stone.
- Often a yellow-green color.
- Made mainly of hardened cholesterol.
Pigment stones
These stones are:
- Less common.
- A dark color.
- Made of a yellowish pigment called bilirubin.