RESUMO
Congenital multiseptate gallbladder (CMGB), is a rare congenital anomaly of gall bladder and it may be associated with other abnormalities. The gallbladder has one or many septa that divides the cavity into multiple distinct sections. It is considered as a pseudo-duplication of the gallbladder. Septate gall-bladder has not been a well-documented entity as most of the patients are asymptomatic, and this is usually an incidental finding which is discovered accidentally during the evaluation of abdominal pain. Some patients may present to the clinician with the complaints of pain in the right hypochondrium and epigastrium or colicky abdominal pain. Rarely, there may be stone formation due to septations, which may lead to recurrent abdominal pain. The most accurate way to diagnose septate gall-bladder is to combine ultrasonography and magnetic resonance cholangiography (MRCP). Here we present a four-year-old female child with a multiseptate gall bladder who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy, and her abdominal pain resolved entirely.