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Posted

I had my gall bladder removed by laparoscopy at Sriphat by Dr Trichak - who was excellent in every way.

I now face the possibility of colon surgery, which is not his speciality (he deals mainly with liver, biliary tract and pancreas)

Very grateful for any recent recommendations for specialised colon surgery from fellow members.

Thanks in advance for any suggestions

Posted

I really don't know what field to look at for a doctor.

But I did copy this of the list of medical services and doctors that is pinned up above. Hope it helps I am just making a guess.

GASTROINTESTINAL

Dr. Ekacai Paiboonworachat

Chiang Mai RAM Hospital

053 920300

Ass Prof Sandhu Trichak

Sriphat Hospital

053 5394 6909/10

Dr Piset Pisetpongsa

Sriphat Hospital

053 5394 6909/10

Posted

Let me make a very important suggestion.

Find a reputable surgeon who can perform the operation laparoscopically. It should be someone who has done many in that way.

It will save you a great deal of pain and give you a much quicker recovery time. The sooner you are up and on your feet, the better off you are going to be.

Good luck.

Posted (edited)

I know this isn't a Chiang Mai doctor, but this is an example of the sort of person you should be aiming for and gives you some questions to ask. I too have had surgery with Dr Trichak, with no problems at all.

Good luck and let us know how you get on.

http://www.phukethos...Hiranyakas.html

PS. Someone like this might be worth the extra cost, rather than fishing in the dark if you can't find someone.

Edited by uptheos
Posted

I really don't know what field to look at for a doctor.

But I did copy this of the list of medical services and doctors that is pinned up above. Hope it helps I am just making a guess.

GASTROINTESTINAL

Dr. Ekacai Paiboonworachat

Chiang Mai RAM Hospital

053 920300

Ass Prof Sandhu Trichak

Sriphat Hospital

053 5394 6909/10

Dr Piset Pisetpongsa

Sriphat Hospital

053 5394 6909/10

Dr Piset is not a surgeon and the OP already knows of Dr Trichak, that leaves DR Paiboonworachat at RAM who some members have previously reported good things about and he is a surgeon.

Posted (edited)

Dr Piset is not a surgeon and the OP already knows of Dr Trichak, that leaves DR Paiboonworachat at RAM who some members have previously reported good things about and he is a surgeon.

His CV certainly needs some work......looks like he's never been out of Chiang Mai.

http://www.chiangmai... th/Ekachai.pdf

Edited by uptheos
Posted

Dr Piset is not a surgeon and the OP already knows of Dr Trichak, that leaves DR Paiboonworachat at RAM who some members have previously reported good things about and he is a surgeon.

His CV certainly needs some work......looks like he's never been out of Chiang Mai.

http://www.chiangmai... th/Ekachai.pdf

I don't know that overseas training/experience is mandatory, there's as many Thai's in Thailand as there are people in the UK (note I didn't say Brits:)) so the chances are that the good doctor has seen and done just as many colon ops as his counterpart in the UK, don't you think?

Posted (edited)

Dr Piset is not a surgeon and the OP already knows of Dr Trichak, that leaves DR Paiboonworachat at RAM who some members have previously reported good things about and he is a surgeon.

His CV certainly needs some work......looks like he's never been out of Chiang Mai.

http://www.chiangmai... th/Ekachai.pdf

I don't know that overseas training/experience is mandatory, there's as many Thai's in Thailand as there are people in the UK (note I didn't say Brits:)) so the chances are that the good doctor has seen and done just as many colon ops as his counterpart in the UK, don't you think?

All I said was his CV needs some work.....it says nothing about his real expertise.

I'm comparing his colon expertise to the other Thai guy not UK http://www.phukethos...Hiranyakas.html

He may have done thousands of colon ops, but how would one know?

I think I know which one I would opt for, but I realise cost might be a factor.

Edited by uptheos
Posted

Dr Piset is not a surgeon and the OP already knows of Dr Trichak, that leaves DR Paiboonworachat at RAM who some members have previously reported good things about and he is a surgeon.

His CV certainly needs some work......looks like he's never been out of Chiang Mai.

http://www.chiangmai... th/Ekachai.pdf

I don't know that overseas training/experience is mandatory, there's as many Thai's in Thailand as there are people in the UK (note I didn't say Brits:)) so the chances are that the good doctor has seen and done just as many colon ops as his counterpart in the UK, don't you think?

All I said was his CV needs some work.....it says nothing about his real expertise.

I'm comparing his colon expertise to the other Thai guy not UK http://www.phukethos...Hiranyakas.html

He may have done thousands of colon ops, but how would one know?

I think I know which one I would opt for, but I realise cost might be a factor.

Don't know what his CV is but 19 years surgery at Ram would seem to me to be a pretty good recommendation. Can't ever remember you finding fault with Ram.

As far as oversea training goes I don't think uptheos said any thing about that. I know his and my GP is Thai trained.

I am just guessing but I take it I was right about

GASTROINTESTINAL being the right field for this kind of surgery

Posted

Dr Piset is not a surgeon and the OP already knows of Dr Trichak, that leaves DR Paiboonworachat at RAM who some members have previously reported good things about and he is a surgeon.

His CV certainly needs some work......looks like he's never been out of Chiang Mai.

http://www.chiangmai... th/Ekachai.pdf

I don't know that overseas training/experience is mandatory, there's as many Thai's in Thailand as there are people in the UK (note I didn't say Brits:)) so the chances are that the good doctor has seen and done just as many colon ops as his counterpart in the UK, don't you think?

All I said was his CV needs some work.....it says nothing about his real expertise.

I'm comparing his colon expertise to the other Thai guy not UK http://www.phukethos...Hiranyakas.html

He may have done thousands of colon ops, but how would one know?

I think I know which one I would opt for, but I realise cost might be a factor.

Yes you're right, apologies, I took the meaning to be a lack of overseas training rather than anything else.

Posted (edited)

To the OP .....

I would schedule a consultation with Aj. Piset Pisetpongsa (at SriPat) and ask his professional advice. He is an exceptional GI specialist who did at least 2 different rotations as a specialist in the US and I would trust his judgement.

edit --- if I remember correctly he works Tue-Fri in the evening at SriPat and does procedures such as endoscopies on Saturdays

Edited by jdinasia
Posted

To the OP .....

I would schedule a consultation with Aj. Piset Pisetpongsa (at SriPat) and ask his professional advice. He is an exceptional GI specialist who did at least 2 different rotations as a specialist in the US and I would trust his judgement.

edit --- if I remember correctly he works Tue-Fri in the evening at SriPat and does procedures such as endoscopies on Saturdays

Whilst others have reported good things I personally cannot support this recommendation, I was a patient of Dr Piset for almost three months and I do not recommend him at all.

Posted

Dr Piset is not a surgeon and the OP already knows of Dr Trichak, that leaves DR Paiboonworachat at RAM who some members have previously reported good things about and he is a surgeon.

His CV certainly needs some work......looks like he's never been out of Chiang Mai.

http://www.chiangmai... th/Ekachai.pdf

I don't know that overseas training/experience is mandatory, there's as many Thai's in Thailand as there are people in the UK (note I didn't say Brits:)) so the chances are that the good doctor has seen and done just as many colon ops as his counterpart in the UK, don't you think?

All I said was his CV needs some work.....it says nothing about his real expertise.

I'm comparing his colon expertise to the other Thai guy not UK http://www.phukethos...Hiranyakas.html

He may have done thousands of colon ops, but how would one know?

I think I know which one I would opt for, but I realise cost might be a factor.

Clearly, the guy uptheos found in Phuket is your man.

Posted

I agree with the previous poster, his CV is most impressive.

It would be nice to get an actual price comparison and see what the difference really is.

I was surprised to see that a gastroscopy, colonoscopy or both at the same time, is the same price as Chiang Mai.

Posted

I agree with the previous poster, his CV is most impressive.

It would be nice to get an actual price comparison and see what the difference really is.

I was surprised to see that a gastroscopy, colonoscopy or both at the same time, is the same price as Chiang Mai.

The Bangkok/Phuket Hospital weighting will distort things, BPH is expensive. Almost forgot, Dr Piset used to work at BPH for a number of years, trivia if ever needed!

Posted

I agree with the previous poster, his CV is most impressive.

It would be nice to get an actual price comparison and see what the difference really is.

I was surprised to see that a gastroscopy, colonoscopy or both at the same time, is the same price as Chiang Mai.

The Bangkok/Phuket Hospital weighting will distort things, BPH is expensive. Almost forgot, Dr Piset used to work at BPH for a number of years, trivia if ever needed!

Well, that's true, but the tests mentioned above are at BPH.

Posted

A post with potentially dangerous quackery has been deleted, and I am moving this thread to the health Forum.

OP, it would help to know the type of surgery/problem.

Not all procedures are suitable for a laparscopic approach, in fact many are not and my guess is that this will be one of them.

Posted

Doctor Surasak Aekpongpaisit. M.D. at Samitivej Sukhumvit Hospital.

Head of the Liver and Digestive Institute.

Speaks excellent English, and is the best doctor I have ever had relating to the above conditions.

-O

Posted

well still without any idea what type of surgery it may be, I'd suggest either of these:

Dr. Pawit Sutharat

Dr. Paisit Siriwittayakorn

Both are at the Division of GI Surgery and Endoscopy at Maharaj Nakorn Chiang Mai Hospital and I expect could be accessed through Sri Pat.

Posted

well still without any idea what type of surgery it may be, I'd suggest either of these:

Dr. Pawit Sutharat

Dr. Paisit Siriwittayakorn

Both are at the Division of GI Surgery and Endoscopy at Maharaj Nakorn Chiang Mai Hospital and I expect could be accessed through Sri Pat.

Thanks for recommendations Sheryl. Type of surgery not yet known. Initial suspicious finding was diagnosed by ultrasound, but subsequent CT Scan was inconclusive. Scheduled now for gastro- and colonoscopy - which should clarify matters.

Posted

First - my sincere thanks to all who took the trouble to offer helpful advice on this.

As it turns out happily, surgery is not required.

The 'suspected intestinal mass' detected and reported on ultrasound was not confirmed by subsequent CT scan, or by gastroscopy + colonoscopy. They could not explain why the ultrasound result was thus, and since the radioogist had shown me the problem on the screen during the scan, I have no reason to doubt the report.

Moral: Don't be alarmed by ultrasound results as I was. My sleepless nights thinking about worst case scenarios, were all for nothing.

Posted

Maybe it was just a "robin".

(Turdus Migratorius)

Just a little medical humor!

Golly they sure let you get worked up long enough before scoping you.

Glad you're going to be fine.

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