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Gastric Adeno Gastroenterologist

The most prevalent type of stomach cancer is Gastric Adeno (gastric adenocarcinoma), which occurs due to the lining of the stomach. Individual approach and early diagnosis is extremely beneficial. Dr. Scott provides a high level of diagnostics, specific treatment, and assistive care at GastroDoxs in Houston, which helps reach the desired goal.

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Texas Medical Board
Harris County Medical Society
American College of Gastroenterology
American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy
Memorial hermann
Houston Methodist leading Medicine
HCA Houston Healthcare
Scott Liu

About the Expert

Dr. Scott Liu, MD, is a board-certified gastroenterologist with over six years of experience and a background in military medicine. He earned his medical degree from the University of Maryland, Baltimore, completed his Internal Medicine residency at Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, and finished his Gastroenterology fellowship through the National Capital Consortium. Dr. Liu provides comprehensive care for a broad range of digestive conditions, including abdominal pain, acid reflux, liver disease, chronic diarrhea, and colon cancer screening. He is a member of the American College of Gastroenterology and is known for his disciplined, patient-focused approach and clear communication.

What Is Gastric Adeno?

Gastric adeno or gastric adenocarcinoma is a cancer which forms in the stomach lining. It is the most widespread kind of stomach cancer. The sooner the better, the sooner, the better.

Common Causes and Risk Factors

  • Infection with Helicobacter pylori bacteria
  • Diets high in salty, smoked, or pickled foods
  • Family history of stomach cancer
  • Smoking or heavy alcohol consumption
  • Certain inherited genetic conditions
  • Age over 50

Signs and Symptoms

  • Persistent indigestion or heartburn
  • Abdominal pain or discomfort after eating
  • Unintended weight loss
  • Feeling full after small meals
  • Nausea or vomiting
  • Blood in stool or vomit

How Dr. Scott Diagnoses Gastric Adeno?

Dr. Scott uses a step-by-step approach:

Medical History and Physical Exam

He examines your signs-particularly bellyache, poor appetite, unexplainable weight loss-and recalls possible risk factors, including H. pylori infection, family history, nutrition, smoking, and alcohol.

Laboratory Tests

We look at the presence of H. pylori on antibodies or antigens, we do a complete blood count to see whether there is any abdominal pain caused by anemia, and we also look at the basic metabolic and liver panels in order to eliminate other causes of abdominal pains.

Upper Endoscopy

  • Direct visualization of the stomach lining with a thin, flexible scope.
  • To establish gastric adenocarcinoma in the microscope, routine biopsies of any suspicious areas were carried out specifically.

Imaging Studies

  • CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis to locate and measure any tumors.
  • PET/CT or MRI where necessary to determine in the case of spread (metastasis) out of the stomach.

Advanced Testing (if needed)

Profiling biopsy tissue at molecular level to either determine certain genetic features and administer targeted therapeutic responses.

Dr. Scott
Treatment

Our Team Offers a Full Range of Care for Gastric Adeno

1. Adaptations in Lifestyle and Diet

  • Nutritional counseling to remain strong and cope with side effects of treatment.
  • Breaking down larger meals to take smaller, frequent meals to aid digestion.
  • Avoid irritants such as alcohol, spicy food and tobacco.
  • Premedication to counter the dehydrating effect of chemotherapy.

2. Medications

  • To reduce stomach acid and allow stomach lining to heal, proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) should be used.
  • Targeted therapies according to the application of two aids: HER2 or PD-L1 (when available).
  • Treatment plans to reduce the size of tumors and manage their growth.
  • Palliative and anti-nausea assistance during treatment.

3. Minimal or sophisticated processes

  • Accurate diagnosis and staging, endoscopic ultrasound and biopsy.
  • Endoscopic resection of localized and early tumors.
  • More advanced cancer gastrectomy: subtotal or full.
  • Coordinated oncology care with chemotherapy and consideration of immunotherapy.
Scott Liu

About the Expert

Dr. Scott Liu, MD, is a board-certified gastroenterologist with over six years of experience and a background in military medicine. He earned his medical degree from the University of Maryland, Baltimore, completed his Internal Medicine residency at Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, and finished his Gastroenterology fellowship through the National Capital Consortium. Dr. Liu provides comprehensive care for a broad range of digestive conditions, including abdominal pain, acid reflux, liver disease, chronic diarrhea, and colon cancer screening. He is a member of the American College of Gastroenterology and is known for his disciplined, patient-focused approach and clear communication.

Frequently Asked Questions

Gastric adenocarcinoma

What is the life span with gastric adenocarcinoma?
Age differences in terms of life expectancy. The five-year survival rate is more than 60 when early caught. Frequent screenings and early intervention can do better.

What are the symptoms that I need to monitor?
Check to see whether we have continued indigestion/ heartburn, the stomach aches following meals, unintentional loss of body weight, gets full soon after, nausea, vomiting, or blood contained in vomit/stool.

Which are the most significant risks?
H. pylori infection, high intake of salty, smoked, or pickled food, smoking, excessive alcohol intake, a history of stomach cancer in the family, and older than 50 years.

Does carboplatin be of use in gastric adeno?
Yes. Carboplatin is a typical form of chemotherapy which shrivels cancerous cells of the stomach and enhances treatment response frequently as one of a mixture of medications.

Is diet modification valuable in preventing or retarding this cancer?
Eating foods—eat more fruit and vegetables, eat less processed, salty, smoked, pickles, eat small frequent meals—help in treatment and can slow down disease.

How is this cancer diagnosed?
To establish the presence and extent of gastric adenocarcinoma, Dr. Scott will resort to upper endoscopy with biopsy, imaging examinations (CT or MRI scans), and blood tests.

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