coltsfan715
New member
The stones don't really go anywhere. Just because the pain is gone just means that you haven't done anything to irritate the situation.
I had similar symptoms to what you are describing that increased in severity (and a few more symptoms added like vommiting, itching feet - yes THAT is a sign of gallstone/gallbladder attacks). I at times felt like I was either going to suffocate or just die.
My attacks were misdiagnosed as anxiety attacks for oh .... 2 years. The attacks hit very sporadically until the months before I had surgery and around the time I was diagnosed as having a "nonfunctioning" gallbladder (which in fact just turned out to be a gallbladder jam packed full of gallstones.
Alot of the time the attacks would hit late at night or wake me up from sleep.
Also to add - yes some types of food will kick start an attack, but I will say I was not that way. I could eat anything it didn't matter sometimes I would get an attack sometimes not. It wasn't until a few months before my surgery to remove my gallbladder that I realized when I drank soda I had an attack within 1-2 hours. When I refrained from soda I had no attacks. I went a week no soda no attacks - decided to have a coke with some popcorn was in the bathroom an hour later sick as a dog. I stopped drinking soda for the next 2 months until my surgery and did not have another attack.
So my point to that is it MAY be food but also look at what you are drinking.
I hope you figure out the problem.
Take Care
Lindsey
I had similar symptoms to what you are describing that increased in severity (and a few more symptoms added like vommiting, itching feet - yes THAT is a sign of gallstone/gallbladder attacks). I at times felt like I was either going to suffocate or just die.
My attacks were misdiagnosed as anxiety attacks for oh .... 2 years. The attacks hit very sporadically until the months before I had surgery and around the time I was diagnosed as having a "nonfunctioning" gallbladder (which in fact just turned out to be a gallbladder jam packed full of gallstones.
Alot of the time the attacks would hit late at night or wake me up from sleep.
Also to add - yes some types of food will kick start an attack, but I will say I was not that way. I could eat anything it didn't matter sometimes I would get an attack sometimes not. It wasn't until a few months before my surgery to remove my gallbladder that I realized when I drank soda I had an attack within 1-2 hours. When I refrained from soda I had no attacks. I went a week no soda no attacks - decided to have a coke with some popcorn was in the bathroom an hour later sick as a dog. I stopped drinking soda for the next 2 months until my surgery and did not have another attack.
So my point to that is it MAY be food but also look at what you are drinking.
I hope you figure out the problem.
Take Care
Lindsey