Gallstones Center - Duluth, MN
Duluth Gastroenterologist Doctors for Gallstones
Type of Physician: Gastroenterologist
What is a Gastroenterologist?
A subspecialty certification by the Board of Internal Medicine; practitioners focus on the stomach, intestines, colon, liver, and gallbladder (digestive organs). The gastroenterologist treats conditions such as abdominal pain, ulcers, diarrhea, cancer, and jaundice and they consult with surgeons when abdominal operations are indicated.
Specialty: Gastroenterology
Common Name: GI Doctor
Gastroenterologist Doctors in Duluth *
 Duluth Clinic Johannes Aas 400 E 3rd St Duluth, MN 55805 (218) 722-8364
 Duluth Clinic Johan S Bakken 400 E 3rd St Duluth, MN 55805 (218) 722-8364
 Duluth Clinic Robert V Erickson 400 E 3rd St Duluth, MN 55805 (218) 722-8364
 Duluth Clinic Teresa Smith 400 E 3rd St Duluth, MN 55805 (218) 722-8364
 Duluth Clinic Steven J Squillace 400 E 3rd St Duluth, MN 55805 (218) 722-8364
 Duluth Clinic Michael D VanNorstrand 400 E 3rd St Duluth, MN 55805 (218) 722-8364
Gallstones
Read the Gallstones article »
What are gallstones?
Gallstones (often misspelled gall stones, or gall stone) are stones that form in the gall (bile).
(The gallbladder is a pear-shaped organ just below the liver and stores the bile
secreted by the liver.)
- Bile is a watery liquid made by the cells of
the liver that is important for digesting food in the intestine, particularly fat.
- Liver cells secrete
the bile they make into small canals within the liver.
- The bile flows through the canals and into larger
collecting ducts within the liver (the intrahepatic bile ducts).
- The bile then flows within the intrahepatic
bile ducts out of the liver and into the extrahepatic bile ducts-first into the hepatic bile ducts, then into
the common hepatic duct, and finally into the common bile duct.
From the common bile duct, there are two
different directions that bile can flow.
- The first direction is on down the common bile duct and into the intestine where the bile mixes with food
and promotes digestion of food.
- The second direction is into the cystic duct, and from there into the
gallbladder (often misspelled as gall bladder).
Once in the gallbladder, bile is concentrated by the removal (absorption) of water.
During a meal, the muscle that makes up the wall of the gallbladder contracts and squeezes the
concentrated bile in the gallbladder back through the cystic duct into the common duct and then into the
intestine. (Concentrated bile is much more effective for digestion than the un-concentrated bile that goes
from the liver straight into the intestine.) The timing of gallbladder contraction-during a meal-allows the
concentrated bile from the gallbladder to mix with food.
Gallstones usually form in the gallbladder; however, they also may form anywhere there is bile; in the
intrahepatic, hepatic, common bile, and cystic ducts.
Gallst...
Read the Gallstones article »
Recommended Reading Related to Gallstones
Obesity »
Obesity facts
- Obesity means having excess body fat. For adults 35 and older, having a BMI greater
than 30 is considered obese.
- Obesity is not just a cosmetic consideration. It is a chronic medical
disease that can lead to diabetes, high blood pressure,
heart disease,
gallstones, and other chronic illnesses.
- Obesity is difficult to treat and has a high relapse rate. Greater than
95% of those who lose weight regain the weight within five years.
- Even though medications and diets can help, the treatment of obesity
cannot be a short-term "fix" but has to be a life-long commitment to
proper diet habits, increased physical activity, and regular
exercise.
- The goal of treatment should be to achieve and maintain a "healthier
weight," not necessarily an ideal weight.
- Even a modest weight loss of 5%-10% of initial weight and the long-term
maintenance of that weight loss can bring significant health benefits ...
Read the Obesity article »
Emergency Contact for Duluth
- In case of Emergency, call 911
Nearby Duluth Hospitals *
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