I had my gall bladder removed in the mid-90s. As with many people after such surgery, I had major problems with diarrhea. It took ten years for me to be able to eat lettuce, for example. Basically, after you lose your gall bladder, your pancreas constantly drips bile into your small intestine, irritating it and causing diarrhea. My way of handling it was to eat very small meals all day and eat very slowly. In other words, if I wanted a small steak, baked potato, and vegetable for dinner, I would eat the piece of steak about 4 pm, then the potato around 6 pm and my vegetable late in the evening. Restaurants were a real problem, so I took a lot of food home with me! I never ate breakfast or even lunch on days when I had a job interview or an important business meeting with clients, etc. Ditto on flying on a plane or going other places.
However, for the past year I have been taking a prescription drug called Welchol. It is FDA approved as a non-statin treatment for high cholesterol. However, last year my new gastroenterologist prescribed it to me "off-label" for the problems I have been having for the past 25 years. The prescription says to take 6 pills a day, but my gastro said to start with one per day and adjust it as needed, and to be careful because it can cause constipation. I have ended up taking one pill every 2-3 days, and the result has been amazing! Instead of 2-3 bathroom trips after eating anything and going without meals when I am in places without bathrooms, I am now living like a normal person. I still eat smaller meals and eat slowly, but I do not have to worry every time I go somewhere out to eat.
Basically, the drug reduces the amount of bile in your small intestine. This helps reduce cholesterol, but in my case, it keeps my system from being constantly irritated. The bad news is that I now have to be more careful about gaining weight! And I also have to be careful not to take it too often.
Anyway, this is an amazing change for me, and I decided to share it with you. There has been recent research on this use, and FDA, is considering approving it for post-gall bladder surgery problems once they get enough evidence of it working and not causing harm. Check it out on medical sites on the internet or ask your doctor about it.