Yes—men can get gallstones, and the warning signs often feel like upper-right belly pain after meals with nausea or back pain.
Gallstones get treated like a “women’s issue,” so a lot of men shrug off early symptoms. If you’re a man with sharp or squeezing pain under the right ribs, pain that creeps to your back or right shoulder, or nausea that hits after a rich meal, your gallbladder belongs on the shortlist.
You’ll learn what gallstones are, why men get them, how the pain tends to show up, what tests are common, and what the next steps usually look like.
What Gallstones Are And Why They Hurt
Gallstones are pebble-like lumps that form in the gallbladder, a small pouch under the liver that stores bile. Bile helps digest fats. When a stone blocks a bile duct, pressure builds and the gallbladder squeezes hard. That squeeze triggers a “gallbladder attack,” also called biliary colic.
Attacks often show up after a heavy meal and can wake you up at night. NIH guidance describes this pattern and explains how duct blockage leads to pain. NIDDK’s gallstones symptoms and causes page is a good quick reference.
Gallstones In Men: Causes And Risk Patterns
Men get gallstones for the same core reasons women do: bile chemistry shifts, the gallbladder doesn’t empty well, or both. Cholesterol stones are common. Pigment stones relate more to bilirubin issues and some blood disorders.
Risk climbs with age, extra body weight, diabetes, and rapid weight loss. Family history also matters. A man who loses weight fast, skips meals often, or has insulin resistance can be a good candidate for gallstones even if he “eats clean.”
Risk Factors Men Often Miss
- Rapid weight loss. Crash dieting can raise risk and can also trigger attacks in someone who already has stones.
- Diabetes or insulin resistance. These conditions tie in with lipid changes and gallbladder motility.
- High triglycerides. This can track with cholesterol-heavy bile.
- Family history. Genetics can stack the deck.
- Long fasting. Less gallbladder emptying can let stones form.
Can A Man Get Gallstones? What Doctors See
Yes. Men show up with the same patterns clinicians see in women. Some cases are “silent” stones found during imaging for something else. Symptomatic cases tend to show up as classic biliary colic, gallbladder inflammation, or a stone that slips into the common bile duct and causes jaundice.
How Gallstone Pain Usually Feels
Gallstone pain often sits in the upper right abdomen or the center upper abdomen. It may spread to the back or the right shoulder blade. The pain usually builds, stays steady, then eases as the blockage shifts. Nausea and vomiting can come with it.
Symptoms That Point To A Complication
Some signs mean it’s not “wait it out” territory. If any of these show up, treat it as urgent:
- Fever, chills, or shaking
- Yellowing of the skin or eyes
- Dark urine or pale stools
- Pain that won’t ease after a few hours
- Repeated vomiting or trouble keeping fluids down
These signs can line up with gallbladder inflammation, bile duct infection, or pancreatitis. Mayo Clinic explains that a lodged stone can inflame the gallbladder and that duct blockage can trigger infection and jaundice. Mayo Clinic’s gallstones symptoms and causes page walks through these complications.
How A Diagnosis Usually Happens
Right-side belly pain can come from lots of causes, so clinicians pair your story with an exam, blood tests, and imaging. Ultrasound is often first because it’s fast and it spots stones in the gallbladder. Blood tests help check for infection, liver irritation, and pancreas stress.
If the pattern suggests a stone in the bile duct, you may get MRCP imaging or an endoscopic test. Some endoscopic procedures can also remove a duct stone during the same session.
Mayo Clinic’s gallstones diagnosis and treatment page outlines common tests and why surgery is often recommended once attacks repeat.
What To Do During An Attack
If you’re in the middle of a suspected gallbladder attack and symptoms are mild, avoid food for a bit and sip water if you can. When you start eating again, keep fat low for a day or two. Over-the-counter pain relief may help some people, but stick to the label.
If you have fever, jaundice, pain that lasts more than a few hours, or repeated vomiting, don’t gamble on home care. Those signs can mean infection or pancreatitis, and they need same-day assessment.
Common Findings And What They Usually Mean
Men often ask, “If I have stones, do I need surgery right away?” The answer depends on symptoms, complications, and how often attacks repeat. This table maps common findings to the usual direction of care.
| What You Notice Or What A Test Shows | What It Often Points To | What Happens Next |
|---|---|---|
| Stones found on ultrasound, no pain history | Silent gallstones | Often no treatment; watch for symptoms |
| Upper-right belly pain after meals, lasts 30 minutes to several hours | Biliary colic from temporary blockage | Pain control, follow-up; surgery discussed if attacks recur |
| Fever plus steady right-side pain and tenderness | Acute cholecystitis | Urgent assessment; antibiotics and surgery planning |
| Jaundice or dark urine, abnormal liver tests | Stone in the common bile duct | Imaging; endoscopic removal may be needed |
| Severe upper-belly pain with high lipase | Gallstone pancreatitis | Hospital care; duct evaluation; gallbladder removal after recovery |
| Repeated nausea, bloating, vague upper-belly discomfort | Possible gallbladder dysfunction or stones | Ultrasound and labs; diet tweaks while awaiting workup |
| Sharp pain that changes with movement, normal ultrasound | Another cause | Broader workup; gallstones move down the list |
| Stone history plus new fever and confusion | Possible bile duct infection | Emergency care; antibiotics and urgent drainage |
Treatment Options Men Commonly Hear About
For recurring symptoms, the most common long-term fix is removing the gallbladder. The logic is simple: the gallbladder is where stones form, and stones often come back if it stays in place. After removal, bile flows straight from the liver into the small intestine.
Gallbladder Removal
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the usual approach. Many people go home the same day or the next day. Some get looser stools for a while as digestion adjusts.
When A Duct Stone Needs A Separate Procedure
If a stone is in the common bile duct, clinicians may remove it with an endoscopic procedure before or around the time of gallbladder surgery.
Medicine To Dissolve Some Stones
There are medicines that can dissolve some cholesterol stones, but they take months, they don’t work for every stone type, and stones can return when the medicine stops. This option is usually reserved for people who can’t have surgery.
Food And Daily Habits That May Cut Flare-Ups
You can’t “flush” stones safely at home. Still, habits that steady your weight and improve metabolic health can lower risk and may cut symptom flares while you wait for care.
Eating Patterns That Are Easier On The Gallbladder
- Keep meals smaller and regular, so the gallbladder empties in a steadier rhythm.
- Limit high-fat meals that trigger strong contractions.
- Choose fiber-rich foods and unsaturated fats more often.
- If you’re losing weight, aim for a steady pace instead of a crash plan.
When To Seek Same-Day Care
If you have red-flag signs, treat it as urgent. The NHS notes that gallstones can cause complications that are treated with pain relief and gallbladder removal. NHS guidance on gallstones gives a plain overview of symptoms and treatment paths.
Same-day care is the right call when you have fever, jaundice, confusion, weakness, a racing heartbeat, or pain that won’t settle.
A Practical Timeline For The Next Steps
Use this as a checklist you can act on.
| Time Window | What To Do | What To Track |
|---|---|---|
| Now | Stop eating if pain is active; sip water if tolerated; rest | Pain location, start time, and whether it spreads to back or shoulder |
| Next 4–6 Hours | If pain stays intense, you vomit repeatedly, or you see fever or yellowing, seek urgent care | Temperature, ability to keep fluids down, urine color |
| Next 24–48 Hours | Arrange a clinic visit if symptoms have eased but the pattern fits gallstones | Trigger meals, duration of each attack, any new symptoms |
| Next 1–2 Weeks | Get ultrasound and labs; keep meals lower in fat while waiting | Any repeat attacks and whether they’re getting closer together |
| After Diagnosis | Discuss surgery timing if symptomatic; ask about duct stone risk | Questions you want answered before scheduling a procedure |
| After Treatment | Return to a balanced diet; keep weight changes steady; follow post-op advice | Stool changes, pain level, incision healing, follow-up dates |
Why Men Should Take Symptoms Seriously
Some men try to “tough it out,” especially if the pain comes and goes. The risk is that the next episode isn’t just pain. Stones can inflame the gallbladder or block the bile duct, and that can lead to infection or pancreatitis.
If your workup confirms gallstones and you’re having attacks, treatment is often straightforward, and many people feel relief once the gallbladder is out. If your tests don’t point to gallstones, that’s still useful because it narrows the cause and speeds you toward the right fix.
References & Sources
- National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK).“Symptoms & Causes of Gallstones.”Explains how duct blockage triggers attacks and lists common symptoms and risk factors.
- Mayo Clinic.“Gallstones: Symptoms & Causes.”Describes warning signs and complications like cholecystitis and bile duct blockage.
- Mayo Clinic.“Gallstones: Diagnosis & Treatment.”Outlines common imaging and why gallbladder removal is often used for recurring symptomatic stones.
- NHS.“Gallstones.”Plain overview of symptoms and common treatments, including surgery for complications.
