Our expert team diagnoses and treats the full spectrum of digestive diseases—from common conditions like acid reflux and irritable bowel syndrome to complex disorders such as Crohn’s disease, liver disease, and gastrointestinal cancers. Using the latest diagnostic tools and advanced treatments, we provide highly personalized care to help you manage your symptoms, improve your digestive health, and enhance your quality of life.
We’ll help you schedule your appointment or find the right location and provider.
Get expert diagnosis and treatment for a wide range of digestive diseases, including conditions that affect gastrointestinal function, digestion, and nutrient absorption.
With so many organs performing so many functions in your digestive system, the number of things that can go wrong is vast. However, problems can be broadly categorized:
The digestion system is a wonder of chemicals, muscles and membranes all working together in a very organized fashion to help keep us alive. No one feels good if their digestive system is not functioning well.
Three different salivary glands in your mouth mix enzymes with the food to create a bolus, or mass, that can be easily swallowed into the esophagus. The esophagus consists of a long tube of muscles that constrict and contract in a rhythm that moves the bolus to a tight closure at its base, known as a sphincter. The sphincter then relaxes and allows the bolus to pass into the stomach.
The stomach is lined with a special membrane that secretes digestive juices that begin the process of breaking down food into usable energy. These digestive juices are acidic; they literally dissolve the food you eat. However, the lining of the stomach not only creates the juices, it creates a chemical barrier that enables the organ to withstand its own digestive juices. The stomach is enclosed by two sets of sphincter muscles that keep the contents of the stomach away from the rest of the organs until this process is complete.
Once food has been broken down and dissolved enough in the stomach, it makes its way into the first part of the small intestine, which is called the duodenum. The duodenum is where food is further digested by pancreatic enzymes and bile. Next, circular folds in the small intestine help to slow the movement of food, so nutrients can be absorbed into the body. Examined under a microscope, the small intestine has tiny structures known as villi that perform this absorption function. Both the folds and villi of the small intestine give this organ a large surface area, which is helpful for absorbing nutrients.
What remains after the body has absorbed the nutrients from your meal is waste product. In the colon (large intestine), water is absorbed from the liquid material that passes from the small intestine creating feces that is stored in the rectum prior to a bowel movement. When you go to the bathroom, the rectum uses a stricture that opens to allow feces to be excreted from the body.
Organs that make enzymes and add them to the food we eat are known as solid organs. Enzymes convert dissolved food (from the stomach) into energy the body can use. These organs —liver, gallbladder, and pancreas— perform many functions that aid digestion, as well as maintain a regulated energy flow to the rest of the body. These enzymes are delivered into the duodenum via the biliary tract (or biliary tree).