Your ultrasound report shows two main findings:
1. Grade 1–2 fatty liver (homogeneous increased echo texture, no focal lesion) — this is very common in adults (especially 40–50+ age group) and is not an emergency condition on its own. It is usually caused by excess weight, high triglycerides, high sugar intake, sedentary lifestyle, or metabolic syndrome. It is reversible in most cases with lifestyle changes.
2. Gallbladder polyps (multiple small, 3–4 mm, well-defined, hyperechoic foci along wall, no shadowing, no pericholecystic fluid) — these are small polyps (almost all 60, PSC, primary sclerosing cholangitis, Indian ethnicity with very high risk of gallbladder cancer in some regions) usually need cholecystectomy.
• For polyps 6–9 mm → follow-up USG every 6–12 months is standard, not immediate surgery.
• Your polyps are small (3–4 mm) + no symptoms (no pain, no fever, no jaundice, no fatty food intolerance) → surgery is not urgent or even indicated at this stage.
The tension is understandable, but this is not an emergency. The doctor may have over-interpreted the report or followed a very conservative approach. Guidelines (American College of Radiology, European Society of Gastrointestinal and Abdominal Radiology, Indian Society of Gastroenterology) are very clear: small asymptomatic polyps do not need urgent removal.
Next Steps
1. Do not panic or rush for surgery — take a second opinion urgently (within 3–7 days) from a senior gastroenterologist or hepatobiliary surgeon (not the same doctor).
• Local reputed gastroenterologist with experience in gallbladder polyps
• Carry both USG report + any previous scans (if any)
2. Ask the second-opinion doctor these exact questions:
• Are these truly polyps or cholesterol deposits / adenomyomatosis?
• Do the size (3–4 mm) and number require surgery in an asymptomatic 43-year-old male?
• What is the follow-up plan (repeat USG in 6–12 months)?
• Any risk factors in my case (family history of gallbladder cancer, porcelain GB, PSC, etc.)?
3. No need for immediate surgery based on this report alone — follow-up USG in 6–12 months is standard for polyps
Health Tips
• Lifestyle changes (start today — can reverse fatty liver and possibly shrink small polyps):
• Cut sugar, maida, fried food, refined carbs completely
• No alcohol
• 30–45 min brisk walking daily
• High-fiber diet: oats, dal, vegetables, whole fruits
• Weight loss if overweight (even 5–7 kg helps fatty liver dramatically)
• Do NOT ignore if symptoms appear later:
• Right upper abdominal pain (especially after fatty food)
• Nausea/vomiting
• Jaundice / fever
• Then repeat USG + consult immediately
This is not a cancer emergency — small asymptomatic gallbladder polyps are almost always benign, and fatty liver is reversible. A calm second opinion from a senior gastroenterologist / HPB surgeon will give you clarity and likely avoid unnecessary surgery.
For help finding the best gastroenterologist/HPB surgeon in your city, preparing exact questions for the second-opinion visit, understanding follow-up USG schedule, or getting a detailed diet/exercise plan to reverse fatty liver, please book an online consultation with me — I’ll review the full report, your symptoms (or lack of them), and any risk factors to give you a clear, evidence-based roadmap so you can make the right decision without tension.
Looking forward to helping you get peace of mind and the correct path forward — book now and let’s clarify this together
Answered
Flag this answer
Let others know if this answer was helpful
Was this answer helpful?
YESNO
Didn't find the answer you are looking for?
Talk to experienced doctor online and get your health questions answered in just 5 minutes.
As the liver enlarges there is chance of bleeding from polyps..as your usg report suggest..so its better to do surgery..kindly consult a surgeon and have a good discussion with them...
If you want to discuss your problem in more detail, feel free to message me on WhatsApp at nine one one nine two five five six nine nine for a detailed free discussion
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
Flu
Reasons for flagging
Hateful or abusive contentSpam or misleadingAdvertisement