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Cholecystectomy Center - Grand Forks, ND

Grand Forks Surgeon Doctors for Cholecystectomy

Type of Physician: Surgeon

What is a Surgeon?

A certification by the Board of Surgery; practitioners manage a wide range of surgical conditions affecting almost any area of the body. The surgeon provides the diagnosis and the care to patients before, during and after surgery. The surgeon is usually responsible for the comprehensive management of trauma victims and the critically ill. The surgeon has special knowledge and skills in birth defects, tumors, infections and metabolic problems relating to the head and neck, breast, abdomen, extremities including the hand, and the gastrointestinal, vascular and endocrine systems. A general surgeon is expected to be familiar with the most relevant features of other surgical specialties in order to recognize problems in those areas and to know when to refer a patient to another specialist.

Specialty: Surgery

Common Name:

Surgeon Doctors in Grand Forks *

Altru Clinic Grand Forks
David R Antonenko
1000 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701) 780-6000

Altru Clinic Grand Forks
Scott D Charette
1000 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701) 780-6000

Altru Clinic Grand Forks
Donald J DeBeltz
1000 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701) 780-6000

Wallace Kurihara MD
Wallace Kurihara
1000 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701) 780-6392

Altru Clinic Grand Forks
Colin S MacColl
1000 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701) 780-6000

Altru Clinic Grand Forks
Mark B Siegel
1000 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701) 780-6000

Altru Clinic Grand Forks
Leslie Sullivan
1000 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701) 780-6000

Altru Hospital Emergency Service
Randolph E Szlabick
1200 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701) 780-5000

Unity Medical Center
O S Omotunde
164 W 13th St
Grafton, ND 58237
(701) 352-1620

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Warren E Albrecht
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Michael Bouton
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Michael S Bouton
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Steven E Briggs
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Matthew Fabian
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Luis Garcia
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Enej Gasevic
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
L Michael Howell
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Gary M Kubalak
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare Transplant Services Center
Bhargau M Mistry
736 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-3400

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Timothy P Monson
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
David A Stover
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Stephen A Stromstad
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

MeritCare General & Vascular Surgery
Michael D Traynor
737 Broadway N
Fargo, ND 58102
(701) 234-2251

Dakota Clinic at Innovis & Innovis Health
Brian K Dees
3000 32nd Ave S
Fargo, ND 58103
(701) 364-3300

Dakota Clinic at Innovis & Innovis Health
Timothy J Mahoney
3000 32nd Ave S
Fargo, ND 58103
(701) 364-3300

Dakota Clinic at Innovis & Innovis Health
Gregg L Personett
3000 32nd Ave S
Fargo, ND 58103
(701) 364-3300

Dakota Clinic at Innovis & Innovis Health
James S Wagner
3000 32nd Ave S
Fargo, ND 58103
(701) 364-3300

Plastic Surgery Institute
Kay Abdullah
3270 20th St S
Fargo, ND 58104
(701) 293-7408

Grand Forks, North Dakota

Upcoming Local Events

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Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy

What is laparoscopic cholecystectomy?

The surgery to remove the gallbladder is called a cholecystectomy (chol-e-cys-tec-to-my). The gallbladder is removed through a 5 to 8 inch long incision, or cut, in your abdomen. The cut is made just below your ribs on the right side and goes to just below your waist. This is called open cholecystectomy.

A less invasive way to remove the gallbladder is called laparoscopic cholecystectomy. This surgery uses a laparoscope (an instrument used to see the inside of your body) to remove the gallbladder. It is performed through several small incisions rather than through one large incision.

What is a laparoscope and how is it used to remove the gallbladder?

A laparoscope is a small, thin tube that is put into your body through a tiny cut made just below your navel. Your surgeon can then see your gallbladder on a television screen and do the surgery with tools inserted in three other small cuts made in the right upper part of your abdomen. Your gallbladder is then taken out through one of the incisions.

Are there any benefits of laparoscopic cholecystectomy compared with open cholecystectomy?

With laparoscopic cholecystectomy, you may return to work sooner, have less pain after surgery, and have a shorter hospital stay and a shorter recovery time. Surgery to remove the gallbladder with a laparoscope does not require that the muscles of your abdomen be cut, as they are in open surgery. The incision is much smaller, which makes recovery go quicker.

With laparoscopic cholecystectomy, you probably will only have to stay in the hospital overnight. With open cholecystectomy, you would have to stay in the hospital for about five days. Because the incisions are smaller with laparoscopic cholecystectomy, there isn't as much pain after this operation as after open cholecystectomy.

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Recommended Reading Related to Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy

Jaundice »

What is jaundice?

Jaundice is not a disease, but rather a sign that can occur in many different diseases. Jaundice is the yellowish staining of the skin and sclerae (the whites of the eyes) that is caused by high levels in blood of a chemical bilirubin. The color of the skin and the whites of the eyes vary depending on the level of bilirubin. When the bilirubin level is mildly elevated, they are yellowish. When the bilirubin level is high, they tend to be brown.

What causes jaundice?

Bilirubin comes from red blood cells. When red blood cells get old, they are destroyed by the body. Hemoglobin, the iron-containing chemical in the red blood cells that carries oxygen, is released from the destroyed red blood cells after the iron it contains is removed. The chemical that remains in the blood after the iron is removed becomes bilirubin.

The liver has many functions. One of its functions is to produce and secrete bil...

Emergency Contact for Grand Forks

  • In case of Emergency, call 911

Nearby Grand Forks Hospitals *

Altru Hospital
1200 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701)780-5000

Altru Rehabilitation Center
1300 S Columbia Rd
Grand Forks, ND 58201
(701)780-2311

RiverView Health
323 S Minnesota St
Crookston, MN 56716
(218)281-9200

North Valley Health Center
109 S Minnesota St
Warren, MN 56762
(218)745-4211

Northwood Deaconess Health Center
4 N Park St
Northwood, ND 58267
(701)587-6060

Union Hospital
42 6th Ave SE
Mayville, ND 58257
(701)786-3800

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