It has been shown that truncal vagotomy with pyloroplasty (TVP), but not highly selective vagotomy (HSV), delays the onset, decreases the extent, and changes the pattern of gallbladder emptying. The aim of the present study was to investigate any alterations in gallbladder emptying after a variety of antiulcer gastric surgery, by milk-technetium 99m (99mTc)-dimethyl iminodiacetic acid (HIDA) scintigraphy. After excluding the cases with spontaneous gallbladder evacuation before milk ingestion, there were 26 controls, 41 duodenal ulcer (DU) patients, 22 after HSV (15 prospective cases), 50 after TVP (23 prospective cases), 8 after TV with gastrojejunostomy (TV-GJ), 10 after Billroth I gastrectomy, and 29 after Billroth II gastrectomy. None of the patients with gastrectomy had additional vagotomy. TVP significantly delayed the onset and decreased the rate of gallbladder emptying as compared with the control, DU, HSV, and Billroth I groups. TVP also changed the pattern of emptying in 20% of the cases (sequential emptying and refilling events). Antiulcer operations excluding the duodenum (TV-GJ and Billroth II) further reduced the rate of gallbladder emptying as compared with (1) control, DU, HSV, and Billroth I groups (P < 0.0001) and (2) TVP (P < 0.001). Onset of gallbladder emptying was not affected by Billroth II gastrectomy, but was significantly delayed by TV-GJ (P < 0.001). The latter two operations also significantly changed the pattern of gallbladder emptying, exhibiting sequential emptying and refilling events, in most cases (P < 0.01 versus TVP). In conclusion, all antiulcer procedures, except HSV, greatly disturb the pattern, the onset, and the rate of gallbladder emptying. Truncal vagotomy seems to disrupt vagally mediated preduodenal mechanism, resulting in delayed onset and reduced rate, whereas duodenal exclusion by gastrojejunostomy results in severely decreased rate of gallbladder emptying.