Best Gastroenterology in Stones Corner
Dr Aidan Woodward
Gastroenterology
Dr Brad kendall
Gastroenterology
Gastroenterologist at the Princess Alexandra Hospital and a Senior Lecturer at the University of Queensland. After post-fellowship training at the University of Virginia and the University of California Los Angeles, he returned to Brisbane to commence public and private practice.
Dr Kate Forgan-Smith
Gastroenterology
Kate subsequently trained in Gastroenterology and Hepatology in Townsville, Brisbane and Melbourne.
Dr Laurence Britton
Gastroenterology
interests are the management of fatty liver disease and iron overload, the topics of his PhD thesis, awarded in 2018. He is a senior lecturer with the University of Queensland and a senior staff specialist at the Princess Alexandra Hospital in Brisbane.
Dr Leisa Barrett
Gastroenterology
Alexandra Hospital. She completed her liver transplant fellowship prior to commencing private practice. Dr Barrett has extensive experience in diagnostic gastroenterology, hepatology and inflammatory bowel disease. Dr Barrett attends private clinics at both our Greenslopes Private Hospital suites and our visiting suites at Mater Redlands Private Hospital.
Dr Luke Hourigan
Gastroenterology
services provided by Dr Hourigan include Gastroscopy, Colonoscopy, Bowel cancer surveillance, Gastrointestinal cancer, Advanced colonic polypectomy, ERCP, Endoscopic Ultrasound, Barretts dysplasia, Achalasia (Per Oral Endoscopic Myotomy or POEM) and Capsule endoscopy.
Dr Mark McCullen
Gastroenterology
Specialist in Hepatology and Gastroenterology at the Royal Brisbane Hospital from 2005 to 2012. After graduating from St Bartholomews Hospital in London he undertook specialist training in Gastroenterology and Hepatology in the Wessex Region based around Southampton University Hospital following on with a senior fellowship in liver transplantation at the Princess Alexandra Hospital.
Dr Peter Whiting
Gastroenterology
group. After completing his undergraduate education in Ireland, he continued gastroenterology training at Princess Alexandra Hospital and completed a research fellowship year before spending a year at the Royal Perth Hospital as the interventional endoscopy fellow.
Dr Rachelle Haikings
Gastroenterology
training at the Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane and Cairns Base Hospital with additional experience in remote and outreach specialist medicine.
Dr Sam O'Connor
Gastroenterology
in gastroenterology in Townsville, before returning to Princess Alexandra hospital in Brisbane for a further two years. His last year of formal advanced training was spent as the Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Motility Fellow.
What does gastroenterology mean?
Gastroenterology is a branch of internal medicine that deals with diseases of the stomach, intestines, liver, biliary tract, pancreas and metabolic diseases. Gastroenterologists are specialists who, after completing their 7 years of medical specialist training, have completed additional special training in the field of digestive disorders and who have passed a final examination as gastroenterologists.
What exactly does a gastroenterologist do?
The gastroenterologist is a doctor who specializes in all organs of the digestive tract, i.e. the esophagus, the stomach, the small and large intestines, the liver, gallbladder and bile ducts, as well as the pancreas. It deals with the diagnosis, therapy and prevention of diseases of the gastrointestinal tract.
In medicine, gastroenterology refers to the study of the stomach and intestines. A gastroloenterologist deals with all diseases of the digestive tract, but is also the right contact for metabolic disorders and diseases of the pancreas or liver. The gastroenterologist can often help you with questions of nutrition, especially when it comes to intolerance to certain foods (for example lactose intolerance or intolerance to gluten, soy, etc.). He knows the causes of such intolerances and can give you advice on the right diet. What examinations does a gastroenterologist perform? Since gastroenterology deals exclusively with internal organs, many examinations and treatments are carried out endoscopically – for example gastroscopy, in which an endoscope (today mostly with a tiny camera through which the patient can follow the examination) through the esophagus and into the stomach is introduced. A gastroenterologist also performs a number of preventive measures; in other words, examinations for the early detection of diseases This also includes the colonoscopy, which can be necessary to detect various intestinal diseases or even colon cancer. Colonoscopies for the early detection of colon cancer are generally only recommended from the age of 50 onwards; in younger people, they are only performed if they have a family history.
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