GallstonesWhat Increases Your RiskYour chances of forming
gallstones that can cause symptoms may be higher if
you:1 - Are female. Females are twice as likely as
males to have gallstones.
- Are older than 55.
- Are
overweight.
- Lose weight rapidly. Gallstones develop in about
one-fourth of very overweight men and women who are on strict diets and in
about half of people who have gastric bypass surgery for obesity. Gastric
bypass surgery reduces the size of the stomach and connects the smaller stomach
to the middle section of the small intestine.
- Have low levels of
"good" cholesterol (HDL or high-density lipoprotein) and elevated
triglycerides, which are a type of fat found in the
blood and in foods.
- Have a disease of the small or large intestine,
such as
Crohn's disease.
- Have a family history of
gallstones.
- Are pregnant.
- Are taking estrogen (after
menopause) or high-dose birth control pills.
- Are Native American or
Hispanic.
- Have
sickle cell disease.
- Are taking a
medicine called octreotide (Sandostatin) or a cholesterol-lowering medicine,
such as gemfibrozil (Lopid) or fenofibrate (Tricor, for example).
- Have
cirrhosis (scarring of the liver).
- Get
very little or no exercise.
- Do not eat for a period of time
(fast).
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